Here is P-brane explaining how the sun goes up and down in only 1 minute and 39 seconds. As the sun moves further away from the camera, it moves lower in the horizon. This is due to how perspective works.
THE SUN RISES AND SETS BECAUSE IT GETS CLOSER AND FARTHER PERSPECTIVE
Once the sun gets far enough away from us, you will watch it at a low enough angel, that it will appear behind the horizon, and no longer be viewable with the naked eye. If you have an optical high zoom device, you can make the horizon appear further away from you and bringing the sun back unto view, for a time being.
Eh,,, the real issue is why can I go east or west from Rome, and end up in Toronto? No flat earther touches this question in any meaningful way. They just point to other map projections, without explaining why the trajectories on those projections make sense.
You can especially if you're a wet suit coated with vaseline ..and going east or west real fast , hit the dome and with some luck the energy from the smack against the dome will carry you along the dome to the otherside of the planet and dump you off Toronto..
Sure can. From Rome to Toronto there is about 4400 miles, as the crow flies. At least we are able to draw straight lines on our map. Ask these globeheads to draw a line from Rome to Toronto on a map, and they going to need to add a curve.
Here is P-brane explaining how the sun goes up and down in only 1 minute and 39 seconds. As the sun moves further away from the camera, it moves lower in the horizon. This is due to how perspective works.
THE SUN RISES AND SETS BECAUSE IT GETS CLOSER AND FARTHER PERSPECTIVE
https://youtu.be/82xFUBwvAZk
Once the sun gets far enough away from us, you will watch it at a low enough angel, that it will appear behind the horizon, and no longer be viewable with the naked eye. If you have an optical high zoom device, you can make the horizon appear further away from you and bringing the sun back unto view, for a time being.
Eh,,, the real issue is why can I go east or west from Rome, and end up in Toronto? No flat earther touches this question in any meaningful way. They just point to other map projections, without explaining why the trajectories on those projections make sense.
Dead in the water.
You can especially if you're a wet suit coated with vaseline ..and going east or west real fast , hit the dome and with some luck the energy from the smack against the dome will carry you along the dome to the otherside of the planet and dump you off Toronto..
You can though.
Sure can. From Rome to Toronto there is about 4400 miles, as the crow flies. At least we are able to draw straight lines on our map. Ask these globeheads to draw a line from Rome to Toronto on a map, and they going to need to add a curve.