I think most people haven't taken an actual weather and climate class to understand how cycles work on the planet relative to the sun. It changed my entire perspective. For example, how can a flat earther explain the sun setting earlier in the winter and staying lighter later in the summer? But places that are higher latitude stay darker longer. Think about Alaska's long dark winters for 22 hours. That doesn't happen in countries near the equator. That gives us a good perspective that the earth is sphere shaped with climate cycles relative to the sun's position of the earth that have happened for 100s of millions of years like clock work.
I think most people haven't taken an actual weather and climate class to understand how cycles work on the planet relative to the sun. It changed my entire perspective. For example, how can a flat earther explain the sun setting earlier in the winter and staying lighter later in the summer? But places that are higher latitude stay darker longer. Think about Alaska's long dark winters for 22 hours. That doesn't happen in countries near the equator. That gives us a good perspective that the earth is sphere shaped with climate cycles relative to the sun's position of the earth that have happened for 100s of millions of years like clock work.
Interesting questions. I know that Rob Skiba has done some modelling work on seasons on the flat earth model.
https://youtu.be/R52_PdZlSq8