Not Anyone To Care For
Ayy lmao
We all need to disprove this video together.
-https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0xClWgidZU-
I have had enough of this shit.
-https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0xClWgidZU-
I have had enough of this shit.
Humans would be falling off all willy nilly if the earth was not flat, now wouldn't they?
http://www.intpforum.com/showthread.php?t=22093
I'd be curious to see how members would respond to this, without doing any deferring to authorities.
In other words, premises:
- you can't trust NASA, or any third party data. not even non-science related academic articles.
- you have to demonstrate the world's roundness to someone in a way that is verifiable from 1st person experimentation/etc
- within a reasonable budget for most people, so lets say €5,000 max.
anyone up for the challenge?![]()
ya cant disprove the truth, m8!
the earth is just a big flat thing with borders that join up to the other ends
space is just a big painting in the sky made by an extinct race of giants
neither the sun nor the earth ever moves, it is a big illusion made by human faith
nasa is a hoax. all astronauts are put under hypnosis by the countdown and told theyre on the moon
government is lying to us, we here at intpf will uncover the truth
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Ha nice try!![]()
Btw, speaking of government lies, I was on the train the other day, and they put subliminal advertising for a shopping centre through the train's PA system thing. Like it's just an automated thing, they advertise the shopping centre every time they're coming close to it.
They also use other hypnotising tactics through how they announce their stops.
I'm pretty certain the people making these announcements know exactly what they're doing with all of that.
I'd be curious to see how members would respond to this, without doing any deferring to authorities.
In other words, premises:
- you can't trust NASA, or any third party data. not even non-science related academic articles.
- you have to demonstrate the world's roundness to someone in a way that is verifiable from 1st person experimentation/etc
- within a reasonable budget for most people, so lets say €5,000 max.
anyone up for the challenge?![]()
a) Go sit on a beach and look out to the ocean and wait for a ship to appear. It comes from 'below' the water, because it's rounding a bend. This alone would be evidence enough to call it spherical, but since this is apparently a "challenge" I'll give more.
Budget: going to the beach.
b) We can also see further away, the higher up we get. Go atop a sufficiently tall building or on a plane and you can see 'over' the bulge of the spherical ground. If the Earth were flat, this wouldn't happen. The only thing that could block your view in a flat Earth would be things protruding up from the ground and/or atmosphere, yet that's not the case. The Earth itself blocks our view and limits our horizon, even on what is otherwise a perfectly 'flat' section of ground.
Budget: climbing a tall building.
c) Put sticks in the ground vertically, about 20-30km apart. Find what time noon (sun directly overheard) occurs at the location of one of the sticks. At that location, the stick won't cast a shadow because the sun's directly overhead. If the stick at the other location casts a shadow at the time of 'noon' for the other stick, then the Earth is spherical. Why?
The distance is not far enough apart that if the Earth were flat, the shadows would be different. It can only occur if the Earth is round. You can put this into mathematical terms whereby you calculate the distance of the sun relative to the distance the sticks are set apart and it's provable that if the Earth really was flat, their shadows would be exactly the same when set that far apart (20-30km) on a flat surface at a distance of 146million - 152million km from an object the size of the sun. So the experiment works regardless of whether we're at perihelion or aphelion.
Budget: two long, straight sticks.
d) There's other observations you can make, regarding how the shape of the moon can only be spherical because of the way light falls on it. It's impossible for it to be anything other than a sphere.
You can test this yourself with a flashlight and any round object. Use a basketball or something and shine a flashlight on it in a dark room from different angles. You'll see that the angle of the light creates various 'crescents' exactly like it would on the moon and that you can replicate all the same kind of light patterns as we see on the moon at night.
To verify that this isn't possible with a circular or disk-shaped object, cut out a circular piece of cardboard and try to do the same. You can't. The shadows produced won't be concave like is produced by the sphere, but convex. This is because in a flat disk, there's no spherical bulge that casts a shadow on the other surfaces of the sphere. So the light patterns will just shine across the disk as normal.
Budget: flashlight and a spherical object.
~
Flat Earth theory rekt in the time it takes me to climb a building.
Yeah I have heard that kind of thing before, it's kind of creepy. The creepiest part is that it actually works on people.
With your telescope you notice the moon has phases, these phases can be used to argue that the earth and moon indeed orbit the sun but for now we'll take it for granted. As you travelI'd be curious to see how members would respond to this, without doing any deferring to authorities.
In other words, premises:
- you can't trust NASA, or any third party data. not even non-science related academic articles.
- you have to demonstrate the world's roundness to someone in a way that is verifiable from 1st person experimentation/etc
- within a reasonable budget for most people, so lets say $5,000 max.
anyone up for the challenge?![]()
The 3d model would prove it though if you performed it irl, this stuff is hard to explain because it's counter-intuitive to 2d verbalization.
The 3d model would prove it though if you performed it irl, this stuff is hard to explain because it's counter-intuitive to 2d verbalization.
How about using a drone suspended in the air to film the rotation of the earth?There's a response to this in the OP at 18:25:
--https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0xClWgidZU&t=18m25s--
The same crescent effects could be seen if the earth was flat but the moon was a round object in the sky some 2-3k miles up and of some 30 miles in diameter. At that distance, traveling to the opposite hemisphere would show a different moon shape because the moon's a lot closer to the earth overall.
or so goes the thinking. i'll play devil's advocate.
To that one, I answer with:
---https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNqNnUJVcVs&t=3m40s---
The same effect is demonstrable with a different scaling of the sun and moon. The size and distance of the sun or moon can't be assumed here.
@redbaron
a) the OP video actually goes through this example at 7:10, with magnification far better than the human eye, and shows that even from as far as we can see with high-zoom capacity, the ships are there all at once.
b) answerable via perspective. the human eye does not look at the world entirely flat; it's spherical and like a camera, there is a degree of fish-eye effect.
[bimgx=250]http://imgur.com/EidhKkj.png[/bimgx]
if you were looking out from atop a skyscraper or a plane, how could you know if the curvature you see is due to lens distortion or earth's curvature?
c) answerable by the above video aimed at Hunter Wulf.
d) the roundness of the moon does not = roundness of earth. especially if, as per the above, you suppose the moon is only a round object in the sky some few thousand miles up and of some 30 miles in diameter.
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How about using a drone suspended in the air to film the rotation of the earth?
Here's an example of what it should look like:
https://vimeo.com/pagefilms/ridethesky
@redbaron
a) the OP video actually goes through this example at 7:10, with magnification far better than the human eye, and shows that even from as far as we can see with high-zoom capacity, the ships are there all at once.
b) answerable via perspective. the human eye does not look at the world entirely flat; it's spherical and like a camera, there is a degree of fish-eye effect.
[bimgx=250]http://imgur.com/EidhKkj.png[/bimgx]
if you were looking out from atop a skyscraper or a plane, how could you know if the curvature you see is due to lens distortion or earth's curvature?
c) answerable by the above video aimed at Hunter Wulf.
d) the roundness of the moon does not = roundness of earth. especially if, as per the above, you suppose the moon is only a round object in the sky some few thousand miles up and of some 30 miles in diameter.
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a) This is actually wrong and the video is misleading. You'll notice when he zooms in, none of these boats are actually on the horizon. When he zooms in on the second boat, notice that there's still a horizon even with the zoom. It doesn't matter how powerful you can magnify, you're going to hit a physical horizon at some point.
Also yes, if the boat is too small you're still not going to see it regardless of where the actual horizon is. Note also how he doesn't show a magnified version of a ship coming into focus, he's just zooming in on ships already over the horizon. This doesn't disprove that ships come over the horizon.
b) The human eye doesn't have a fish-eye effect, because we don't translate the images onto a flat surface like a computer screen. The fish-eye effect occurs on your screen because what you're looking at is a wide angle picture (curved) altered to fit onto a flat computer monitor, which naturally warps the dimensions.
This discrepancy doesn't occur to the human brain and our vision, because our brains aren't flat computer screens - they're complex and adaptable organs that are capable of giving us an accurate picture of reality. I know you're playing devil's advocate, but let's avoid the, "BUT WOT IF EVERYFING WE NO ABOUT REALITY IS RONG REDBARUN?!" because I can't be bothered with that one right now.
c) It's actually not but I don't have the patience or the mathematical competence to necessarily demonstrate why. Don't need this point to prove the Earth is spherical though.
d) It's actually a very important point though, because the moon is responsible for tidal forces and its distance/size/orbit is something predictable and calculable due to gravity.
The fact that the moon is spherical verifies that celestial bodies develop spherically because of gravity.
The moon is only a few thousand kilometres from Earth? It'd crash into it. Earth has gravity, we know this. It can also be verified first hand. If the Moon was an object 30km in diameter only a few thousand kilometres away - it would fall back to Earth.
Not to mention it'd be easily noticeable by all kinds of passenger jets, balloonists, skydivers...and so on and so forth.
A 30km diameter object only a few thousand kilometres into the sky would also make a lunar eclipse impossible. It would in fact, make it almost impossible to ever see the moon at all because it'd be in the Earth's shadow more often than not. If it's night time on Earth, then any object only a few thousand kilometres above is also undoubtedly going to also be in darkness.
Stating the moon as an object with 30km diameter orbiting at ~3250km raises far more unbelievable scenarios than it being an object closer to 3,500km in diameter orbiting ~375,000km away.
@Auburn
Are you a flat earther?
@Auburn
I'm very interested in hearing your rebuttals ^^ (come come, stop playing devil's advocate, join us on the rational side!)
I'm on your side Hunter.
But to really debunk the flat-earthers, you gotta think like them. And then out-think them.
Some of the points made above are okay-ish, but I don't feel I'd yet be "sold" on the round-earth idea if I was coming from the flat-earth model. Every argument so far has had some grey area and "room for interpretation".
I have a couple of rebuttals in mind myself which I feel are pretty strong. But I'll save them for later. ^^
Okay 0:
Crossing the South Pole
So for under $5k, what I would try is a variation of your cross over Antarctica on a plane. But I'd specifically design it to keep track of distances.
I'd take beacons with me, which I would drop like bread crumbs every 100 miles or so. Every time I drop a beacon, it would send out a signal of how far away I am moving in relation to the beacon.
If the beacon starts to get too far to broadcast or gets obscured by a snowstorm before the 100 miles, I'd drop another one right away, and keep track of the mileage. When I finally emerge on the other side of Antarctica, I'd know how many miles I traveled via the plane's speed, time taken, the plane's own instruments, but also the beacons.
[bimgx=300]http://imgur.com/0K3hpRw.png[/bimgx]
Here the green arrow that goes off South America is where I'd start my flight, with the goal in mind to pop up at the base of Australia, seen by the other green arrow. If I succeed and my distance traveled is only some 2k miles, then I've confirmed the earth is round.
To explain the same trip via a flat earth model would take saying I somehow traveled all the way around the diameter of the flat earth (seen here by the orange line) to get to the base of Australia. That would be some 10 times the distance, and the gas on my plane alone would make that an impossibility.
If I did get thrown off-course a bit and popped up at, say, where the red arrow is, it'd still be some 5 times the distance I recorded with my beacons and it still would not make sense with my observations + time taken + gas.
Budget:
- $1,500 one-way flight
- $150 x ~20 beacons = $3,000
Total?: $4,500
Curvature of the Earth
The other thing I might try is to measure the curvature of the earth using long distance lasers. The horizon of the water introduces a lot of variables, but lasers are pretty consistent.
These can do 100 mile distances, but I think there are longer ones. What I'd try to do is go to a large lake with a friend and we'd both be on opposite sides. The lake provides a guarantee of equal starting elevation since the water line would be the same.
We'd both go up exactly 30 feet from the lake's elevation (to prevent interference) and mount our lasers to be exactly level with gravity. Then we'd shine them back at each other to measure whether it arrives at the other side at an angle. I'd expect the laser light to shine some feet above where the laser is being placed.
This experiment would have to be very well calibrated, but I think it could work, and for under $5k.
It doesn't really solve the question. One can say the sky is stationary and the earth is rotating (love that vid btw), but one can just as easily say the sky is what's rotating while the earth is stationary.
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