Again, a fish eye lense will show a curvature where there is none. This film proves nothing.
I am not a flat earther but there are a few facts that disturb me and no one has been able to answer.
Given the curvature of the earth as known or widely accepted, at a 50 miles distance, two ships at sea should have no line of sight contact with each other because each ship would be 1667 feet below the horizon (or seas level) from line of sight contact.
Modern Navy destroyers have laser guided targeting systems that can paint a sea or land target at over 50 miles away for a missile strike at sea level.
If lasers (light rays) do not bend then line of sight targeting should be impossible on an object 1667 foot below line of sight level and yet we paint a laser target with line of site at over 50 miles.
Explain this to me like I am a child, I am listening.
Also. Light does bend. Depending on conditions, it curves more or less. The question you would then have to answer is not whether something far away can be seen, but why would it ever not be seen? For example, Chicago skyline can sometimes be seen across Lake Michigan from on top of sand dunes but only the upper parts of the buildings. If flat, why wouldnt the lower halves of the building always be visible with the top halves?
Again, a fish eye lense will show a curvature where there is none. This film proves nothing.
I am not a flat earther but there are a few facts that disturb me and no one has been able to answer.
Given the curvature of the earth as known or widely accepted, at a 50 miles distance, two ships at sea should have no line of sight contact with each other because each ship would be 1667 feet below the horizon (or seas level) from line of sight contact.
https://earthcurvature.com
Modern Navy destroyers have laser guided targeting systems that can paint a sea or land target at over 50 miles away for a missile strike at sea level.
If lasers (light rays) do not bend then line of sight targeting should be impossible on an object 1667 foot below line of sight level and yet we paint a laser target with line of site at over 50 miles.
Explain this to me like I am a child, I am listening.
Also. Light does bend. Depending on conditions, it curves more or less. The question you would then have to answer is not whether something far away can be seen, but why would it ever not be seen? For example, Chicago skyline can sometimes be seen across Lake Michigan from on top of sand dunes but only the upper parts of the buildings. If flat, why wouldnt the lower halves of the building always be visible with the top halves?