Message from @Ronin
Discord ID: 668476487539884063
Unless you dig a canal and then it does
water is always level, regardless of the container
canal, lake, plastic tubing, ocean.....doesn't matter
what about drops of water
Believe it or not, when water finds its level, it does not form a straight line. Because the Earth is curved, and gravity pulls in objects from all directions, water will be affected by these, and since water can’t be perfectly level unless all sides of it are being equally affected by gravity, bodies of water will always have a curve to them. Based on the area that the water takes up, that curve may be indistinguishable from a straight line (a glass of level water is considered straight, but the oceans are not).
Now, some of the skeptics may be saying “gosh, well what about the oceans? They are curved, but they can’t be level because they are always making waves, which means that there is an unequal pull on them as a whole! ” Well, you’re not wrong…
If the sun and moon didn’t exist. Because the moon is so close to the Earth, and the sun is so massive, they have slight gravitational affection to the Earth’s tides, causing waves, and an unequal distance from the top of the high waves, and the top of the lower waves, from the center of Earth’s gravitational pull. Take out these two forces (and any others from other planets), and the tides would be perfectly still, meaning they would be level.
So really, you can’t actually ask this question and get any reasonable answer. Water’s level is dependent on the shape of Earth’s gravitational field,
yep and..
hello fellow flats
You know level still doesnt mean flat @Logrian @Flat Earth PhD
correct. flat means no bumps/dips/deviations from a plane. but since we have mountains and seas/lakes have waves, level is a better term.
but water is always level
and that's the most important fact
no
it's curved
Level means same distance from a given point
no
level is defined in practice using a.................. LEVEL
which sets a plane that is perpendicular to a plomb bob
and parallel to water level
*a horizontal plane or line with respect to the distance above or below a given point.*
what does horizontal mean?
horizontal plane
How does force work in a flat earth system
it's the same def I gave
shills......
something has to be pulling us down
density
Lmao here we go again
but what pulls density down
Horizontal: parallel to the plane of the horizon; at right angles to the vertical.
what is the vertical?
vertical is a y axis and horizontal is an x axis