You can still see the candle light from every point of the football field. It also never dips below ground level which in reality it clearly does every night. And while it's dipping below the horizon at one point, it's high in the sky in another. Impossible on a flat surface. I honestly don't get how grownups don't see the myriad of glaring problems with this theory.
Yes, messing with camera exposure settings for 10 seconds proves the sun never, ever sets. Even though it's bright enough to produce 100000 lux on a sunny day, it, uh, moves away a little bit somehow and even though it's still in line of sight we suddenly can't see it anymore and that's nighttime. This is claimed by presumably functional adults. I am beyond words.
You can still see the candle light from every point of the football field. It also never dips below ground level which in reality it clearly does every night. And while it's dipping below the horizon at one point, it's high in the sky in another. Impossible on a flat surface. I honestly don't get how grownups don't see the myriad of glaring problems with this theory.
The sun does not dip below the horizon. Get a high zoom camera and you can bring it back into view.
https://youtu.be/Mgkz2I-oqYI
It appears below the horizon as that is how perspective works.
Yes, messing with camera exposure settings for 10 seconds proves the sun never, ever sets. Even though it's bright enough to produce 100000 lux on a sunny day, it, uh, moves away a little bit somehow and even though it's still in line of sight we suddenly can't see it anymore and that's nighttime. This is claimed by presumably functional adults. I am beyond words.
If you have any more questions feel free to ask. Was nice talking with you friend.