Message from @catman

Discord ID: 643916124022374410


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

2019-11-12 20:54:39 UTC  

i've just never studied this

2019-11-12 20:54:50 UTC  

i was just making a wrong assumption based off of what you said

2019-11-12 20:55:08 UTC  

Physics is hard

2019-11-12 20:55:16 UTC  

It's usually in intuitive

2019-11-12 20:55:26 UTC  

i know

2019-11-12 20:55:35 UTC  

it was just that specific aspect

2019-11-12 20:55:36 UTC  

thanks

2019-11-12 20:55:45 UTC  
2019-11-12 20:55:51 UTC  

ironically enough, that's one of the arguments i used earlier

2019-11-12 20:55:53 UTC  

What's your counter

2019-11-12 20:56:32 UTC  

there isn't one, really