And, I've posed this to you before, flatard, you refused to even touch it, but here we are:
Perspective, bub. If I have my telescope on Jupiter on the east coast of Canada, and a guy in Japan has his telescope on Jupiter as well, if we're on a flat plane how is it we get the EXACT same perspective of Jupiter in our images?
You even understand what I'm asking?
Two opposite points on a flat plane. SHOW ME how both of these can image a subject and BOTH get the EXACT same perspective angle? NOT possible on a flat plane, bub.
Perspective, bub. If I have my telescope on Jupiter on the east coast of Canada, and a guy in Japan has his telescope on Jupiter as well, if we're on a flat plane how is it we get the EXACT same perspective of Jupiter in our images?
And, I've posed this to you before, flatard, you refused to even touch it, but here we are:
Perspective, bub. If I have my telescope on Jupiter on the east coast of Canada, and a guy in Japan has his telescope on Jupiter as well, if we're on a flat plane how is it we get the EXACT same perspective of Jupiter in our images?
You even understand what I'm asking?
Two opposite points on a flat plane. SHOW ME how both of these can image a subject and BOTH get the EXACT same perspective angle? NOT possible on a flat plane, bub.
You outsmarted yourself:
Perspective, bub. If I have my telescope on Jupiter on the east coast of Canada, and a guy in Japan has his telescope on Jupiter as well, if we're on a flat plane how is it we get the EXACT same perspective of Jupiter in our images?