So you're saying that if you're standing at the tallest point of a plane, that some lower part of that plane will somehow "rise" up to block your view?
This amounts to an optical illusion. The ground doesn't "rise" to block your line of sight. It appears to rise, when interpreted in a specific narrow manner. But in reality, there is no object blocking your line of sight.
If I'm standing on the peak of Everest holding laser pointer powerful enough to reach the moon...well you're telling me that would be impossible because something that isn't the tallest point on the flat earth reaches up and interrupts the beam. But I'm already standing on the tallest point. Please explain how I can simultaneously be standing on the tallest point but also have my laser beam broken by something taller. Doesn't make sense.
So you're saying that if you're standing at the tallest point of a plane, that some lower part of that plane will somehow "rise" up to block your view?
Yes.
How
Here is a orthographic view from a top that is 1 mile high, how the horizon rises to eye level .
FROM 1 MILE HIGH ORTHOGRAPHIC VIEW OF THE HORIZON RISING TO EYE LEVEL-
https://youtu.be/XOIMSEb6ZYk
This amounts to an optical illusion. The ground doesn't "rise" to block your line of sight. It appears to rise, when interpreted in a specific narrow manner. But in reality, there is no object blocking your line of sight.
If I'm standing on the peak of Everest holding laser pointer powerful enough to reach the moon...well you're telling me that would be impossible because something that isn't the tallest point on the flat earth reaches up and interrupts the beam. But I'm already standing on the tallest point. Please explain how I can simultaneously be standing on the tallest point but also have my laser beam broken by something taller. Doesn't make sense.