Message from @p̴͐ͅk̶̝͝p̵̳̃2̷̨́4̸

Discord ID: 674958747260551188


2020-02-06 12:05:20 UTC  

If I ask really difficult questions for flat earthers will I get responses?

2020-02-06 12:05:54 UTC  

Because so far only a handful of flat earthers even respond, and it has been "I don't know enough about that"

2020-02-06 12:06:11 UTC  

The others just dodge and repeat water ball over and over

2020-02-06 12:14:40 UTC  

@p̴͐ͅk̶̝͝p̵̳̃2̷̨́4̸ there's a lot we don't know because it's either impossible to reach it or it doesn't exist like saying what is underground or what's beyond the ice wall in east antarctica but we can come to a sensible conclusion on some other stuff that is within our reach

2020-02-06 12:16:27 UTC  

I just want an idk or an answer

2020-02-06 12:16:39 UTC  

Almost all I get is dodging

2020-02-06 12:16:48 UTC  

Which doesn't help anyone

2020-02-06 12:17:13 UTC  

ok il try my best to answer

2020-02-06 12:17:17 UTC  

Eventually I'll get a good answer for my questions, just gotta ask a lot of people

2020-02-06 12:18:00 UTC  

1st. Why is there a pressure gradient on earth if there is no gravity? Why does the air thin out higher up?

2020-02-06 12:18:37 UTC  

2nd why do the sun and moon not get smaller in the sky as they set

2020-02-06 12:19:21 UTC  

3rd why on a flat earth is the eclipse at different positions using vectors, but on a globe earth it all points to one spot.

2020-02-06 12:30:31 UTC  

ok lets go one by one, on the first question in the flat earth model the earth is enclosed so that means all the gasses are stuck inside. air is just a fluid mixture of different gases and some of which are heavier and lighter, this means that there are different density gasses at each level of the earth, here is the different density of gasses affecting each other https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DgVWbuFTd4c

2nd, i've some videos where the sun did get closer in africa but i will be honest and say i don't know. i will need to look into it more.

3rd i don't understand your question, care to explain it?

2020-02-06 12:31:49 UTC  

In response to different density gases, people have measured the mixture of gas at different elevations and found it doesn't change. the % stays the same, the amount of each changes though.

2020-02-06 12:32:49 UTC  

@He Cute the 3rd things explanation <https://youtu.be/EixzcOdp1uo>

2020-02-06 12:43:30 UTC  

@p̴͐ͅk̶̝͝p̵̳̃2̷̨́4̸ 3rd video doesn't give out the specifics on the observations made and where the lunar eclipse was, if you could please provide me with those. i never said that the mixture of gas change but since the pressure and density is highest at sea level that means that there was already a set amount of density in different elevation of the earth in the enclosed system. there's also another reason, because at higher altitude you get closer to the sun which is fairly close on the fe model it will be more hotter so the density of air gasses also decreases.

2020-02-06 12:44:05 UTC  

ah ok ty

2020-02-06 12:44:28 UTC  

and it does give specifics. It gives the vector information for each placement

2020-02-06 12:44:34 UTC  

as it gets placed

2020-02-06 12:45:05 UTC  

The point is all of those numbers from around the world don't add up on a flat earth model but do on a globe earth model.

2020-02-06 12:45:37 UTC  

and all measurements are independently made by people that don't care about what anyone else is saying

2020-02-06 12:47:19 UTC  

he doesn't give the exact link to where the observations was made, going to timeanddate.com doesn't show what he put on the video

2020-02-06 12:51:24 UTC  

i have a question if you care to answer, why are the sun rays suddenly divergent on a lunar eclipse on the globe model?

2020-02-06 12:51:46 UTC  

I will answer tonight can you pm me the question

2020-02-06 12:51:52 UTC  

im going to work now, ty for answering my other questions

2020-02-06 12:52:47 UTC  

alright, this is what i mean

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/538929818834698260/674960684194463757/unnamed.jpg

2020-02-06 13:06:27 UTC  

What do you mean “suddenly diverge”?

2020-02-06 13:28:44 UTC  

we are taught that since the sun is so far away, rays are parallel but for some reason when a lunar or solar eclipse happens it becomes divergent?

2020-02-06 13:30:03 UTC  

No

2020-02-06 13:30:13 UTC  

Those are the only relevant angles

2020-02-06 13:30:20 UTC  

Not perfectly parallel perhaps

2020-02-06 13:30:48 UTC  

The light comes from multiple angles

2020-02-06 13:31:03 UTC  

The ones in the image are the only relevant angles

2020-02-06 13:31:12 UTC  

To the topic at hand

2020-02-06 13:35:00 UTC  

you still haven't explained why it becomes divergent, if it comes at multiple angles then it's divergent

2020-02-06 13:37:59 UTC  

Because those are the only relevant angles

2020-02-06 13:42:31 UTC  

bruh you haven't explained WHY these angles suddenly change in the case of a lunar or solar eclipse, "the are the relevant angles" says nothing substantial because all angle should be hitting at the same angle not arbitrarily change one angle to another because you deem it

2020-02-06 13:44:19 UTC  

None of them suddenly change

2020-02-06 13:48:09 UTC  

it should be looking like this and the moon near the earth not divergent rays randomly hitting the moon when a solar or lunar eclipse happens, your model is arbitrary bs

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/538929818834698260/674974620071231498/219-2190105_antarctic-food-web-research-sun-rays-on-earth.png

2020-02-06 13:49:36 UTC  

Flat Earth doesn't even have an accurate model lmao