And why shouldn't I be okay with that? Where else are you going to get the view? At an altitude of a few hundred kilometers, all you see is the face of the Earth right beneath you. You have to get to a much higher altitude to see it all in one view. We stopped going to those altitudes once the Apollo program terminated. But there have been the occasional non-U.S. Moon probe. I don't recall if they took pictures.
At least I understand the subject. All you have is ignorance and put-downs. How can the Earth be flat if Magellan went entirely around it in the16th century? But they knew in advance of that, that it was round. To put it bluntly, there is no way that a flat earth could "work." They have established long ago that it is not possible to put together a rectilinear surveying grid that does not have problems over large distances, due to the spherical distortion of the survey lines. (Lines that start out parallel begin to converge.) It does not take a trip to the Moon to figure this out.
Have you seen the curve? No u have not.
NASA TOLD YOU thete is a curve yet they cant provide nothing but shit pics from CGI. I don't care if its flat or round i jyst know the trillions of dollars these idiots spend on space they can't be give us something better than this shit.
At 40,000 feet, I have seen the curve. End of story. And if you were courageous enough to look at the Apollo photographs, you would "see the curve" also, so cut the bullshit about any of this being fake. You are just too cowardly and lazy to see the pictures that are available today, such as this taken from the International Space Station: https://static.scientificamerican.com/sciam/cache/file/4E79798C-A892-47A5-8A52900FABF9BE81_medium.jpg. See the curve? And it's not CGI, so stop making up a myth.
You guys. You keep on saying there are no contemporary images, but all one has to do is look for them and they are there in profusion. Maybe not of the whole planet, but you put your camera within a half-inch of a basketball and try to take a picture of the whole ball. Impossible, right? So, not only do you not understand astronomy, you don't understand photography.
I can help you understand, but I don't take instruction from the ignorant.
It's unavoidable. It's also something that would be seen for a flat earth as well (the rim of the LP record effect)---or weren't you aware of that? Glad to see that you had no argument against all the other points I raised.
And why shouldn't I be okay with that? Where else are you going to get the view? At an altitude of a few hundred kilometers, all you see is the face of the Earth right beneath you. You have to get to a much higher altitude to see it all in one view. We stopped going to those altitudes once the Apollo program terminated. But there have been the occasional non-U.S. Moon probe. I don't recall if they took pictures.
At least I understand the subject. All you have is ignorance and put-downs. How can the Earth be flat if Magellan went entirely around it in the16th century? But they knew in advance of that, that it was round. To put it bluntly, there is no way that a flat earth could "work." They have established long ago that it is not possible to put together a rectilinear surveying grid that does not have problems over large distances, due to the spherical distortion of the survey lines. (Lines that start out parallel begin to converge.) It does not take a trip to the Moon to figure this out.
Have you seen the curve? No u have not. NASA TOLD YOU thete is a curve yet they cant provide nothing but shit pics from CGI. I don't care if its flat or round i jyst know the trillions of dollars these idiots spend on space they can't be give us something better than this shit.
At 40,000 feet, I have seen the curve. End of story. And if you were courageous enough to look at the Apollo photographs, you would "see the curve" also, so cut the bullshit about any of this being fake. You are just too cowardly and lazy to see the pictures that are available today, such as this taken from the International Space Station: https://static.scientificamerican.com/sciam/cache/file/4E79798C-A892-47A5-8A52900FABF9BE81_medium.jpg. See the curve? And it's not CGI, so stop making up a myth.
You guys. You keep on saying there are no contemporary images, but all one has to do is look for them and they are there in profusion. Maybe not of the whole planet, but you put your camera within a half-inch of a basketball and try to take a picture of the whole ball. Impossible, right? So, not only do you not understand astronomy, you don't understand photography.
I can help you understand, but I don't take instruction from the ignorant.
Congrats the 1st one ever to see the curve from 40,000 ft. You are a special kind of stupid
It's unavoidable. It's also something that would be seen for a flat earth as well (the rim of the LP record effect)---or weren't you aware of that? Glad to see that you had no argument against all the other points I raised.