Message from @BigFooker
Discord ID: 678705858565111838
Over 90 servers and no yo-yo emoji smh
I know :(((
There definitely should be
<:tp:507990258055381024>
hello my peeps
I have a question for you flat earthers. Ive heard many different explanations for what is at the end of the edge, if the Earth is flat. Ive heard ice walls, but what if you climbed over them? What other explanations are there?
No FE claims an edge
Ive heard something those lines, guess im mistaken.
Its fine dont worry, The “ice wall” is the 360 perimeter (Antarctica) maintaining the waters of the earth, whats beyond I would argue is unknown, is there more land? More rings of ice with other civilisations? A dome? An edge? A container? A limitation?
ah, ok.
Yes how doesn’t the ice melt
Also it’s at the equator too
There’s ice at the equator*
How doesn’t that part of ice melt from the sun??
also, if the Earth is flat, how come one can take a ship and go from one end of South America to the other by going straight across Earth.
Going due east over a long distance won't be a straight line in either model actually
to stay due east would require course adjustment
yes
On a globe
The most common flat earth model is also compatible
i.e. when they do the sailing race around Antarctica, from west to east, they have to turn to the right
to stay on course,
Which eliminates any possibility of the ice wall
The common flat earth model has the north pole in the center
right, but that model fails lots of other places
thus the course correction leads to a circle around the noth pole
24 hrs sun in antarctica in January for example
@Wolfgang Goyim Ron's got a new name
How do we get star trails on this?
B/c that's what happens when that motion exits
Why is that a question
Also
A common FE argument is that Polaris doesn't move, but in the globe earth model, it actually does very very slowly, so slowly that it's imperceptible over short timeframes. In 3000 BC, Thuban was the north star, and circa 320 BC, Pytheas said that the north celestial pole was devoid of stars. A complete cycle of the precession of the equinoxes takes over 25,000 years.
@SiliconBassist Thats not right
Polaris moves in a circle over one night, just like all the other stars
it does
You're right about teh precession though
That's different
OIc what you're saying
