Message from @catman

Discord ID: 643915535213658130


2019-11-12 20:35:50 UTC  

what

2019-11-12 20:35:51 UTC  

ok

2019-11-12 20:35:53 UTC  

im dead

2019-11-12 20:35:54 UTC  

lmao

2019-11-12 20:35:59 UTC  

hi

2019-11-12 20:42:35 UTC  

Hi

2019-11-12 20:44:43 UTC  

@CryptoCypher the angle of refraction of the window is very close to that of air, meaning that the distortion that you speak of negligible, and photos and views seen through it are deemed accurate

2019-11-12 20:45:05 UTC  

@catman prove it!

2019-11-12 20:46:11 UTC  

I’m not gonna get too deep into this Bc I have a game of EU4 to play, but the burden of proof lies on you, Cypher

2019-11-12 20:46:38 UTC  

You made the initial claim that these windows’ shapes distorts light

2019-11-12 20:47:39 UTC  

@Santa Phil *what happened?*

2019-11-12 20:47:42 UTC  

Crypto I'll admit I made a mistake in my explination

2019-11-12 20:48:04 UTC  

@CryptoCypher prove what its literally a fact

2019-11-12 20:48:50 UTC  

But when light passes from air to glass it refracts by 37 degrees , when it leaves it refracts back to it's original path

2019-11-12 20:49:03 UTC  

@RadRhys curved glass is much like a lense, I presume you're familiar with lenses, you should know that lenses cause distortion, surely this isn't new information to you. Now, the burden of proof is on @catman to prove his claim

2019-11-12 20:49:46 UTC  

Although the glass is curved it is not a lense

2019-11-12 20:49:52 UTC  

Curved glass does not necessarily make a lens

2019-11-12 20:49:56 UTC  

Maybe you should research lense desing

2019-11-12 20:50:07 UTC  

hm

2019-11-12 20:50:12 UTC  

Design

2019-11-12 20:50:26 UTC  

Cause if you do you will realize your claim is false

2019-11-12 20:50:33 UTC  

good point

2019-11-12 20:51:05 UTC  

my claim isn't false, if you're seeing curvature through a glass window of an aircraft, that right there is the proof. there is no curve

2019-11-12 20:51:23 UTC  

r u serious

2019-11-12 20:51:26 UTC  

im too tired for this

2019-11-12 20:52:10 UTC  

but the curve of a window is negligible, meaning that images can still be taken as true and accurate, like @catman said

2019-11-12 20:52:25 UTC  

Fredward that isn't the effect

2019-11-12 20:52:30 UTC  

and that's only one piece of observation evidence

2019-11-12 20:52:37 UTC  

sorry

2019-11-12 20:52:40 UTC  

i meant the distortion

2019-11-12 20:52:45 UTC  

*i think that's correct*

2019-11-12 20:52:47 UTC  

The curve is the same on both sides

2019-11-12 20:53:01 UTC  

The change of angle is constant

2019-11-12 20:53:25 UTC  

Meaning no distortion like you speak of

2019-11-12 20:54:02 UTC  

Think of water in a glass, the glass is curved. If you look at a straw in the water through the glass the straw is still straight

2019-11-12 20:54:13 UTC  

Or it is larger

2019-11-12 20:54:23 UTC  

right

2019-11-12 20:54:27 UTC  

yeah

2019-11-12 20:54:29 UTC  

Meaning that the glass causes a linear transformation to the image

2019-11-12 20:54:32 UTC  

i'm not a flat earther

2019-11-12 20:54:37 UTC  

Not a nonlinear one like you suggest