"Obviously the point of rotation remain the same, and your vantage to it changes depending on your position. There are certainly places on earth where you can’t see it, for instance."
My bad, I misread that.
If earth is flat, then there's only one point of rotation in the night sky. Since the earth IS a rotating spheroid, we would expect 2. Northern and Southern points of rotation. https://earthsky.org/tonight/sirius-future-south-pole-star/
This is evident when looking at amateur astronomer timelapse videos from both hemispheres.
"Obviously the point of rotation remain the same, and your vantage to it changes depending on your position. There are certainly places on earth where you can’t see it, for instance."
Fucking wrong.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=huysYcz-AiQ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuQwRzQEjCc
In what way?
The point of rotation doesn’t differ as you move. It stays exactly where it was - even if there are 2 of them in the sky.
My bad, I misread that. If earth is flat, then there's only one point of rotation in the night sky. Since the earth IS a rotating spheroid, we would expect 2. Northern and Southern points of rotation. https://earthsky.org/tonight/sirius-future-south-pole-star/ This is evident when looking at amateur astronomer timelapse videos from both hemispheres.
pfffffft whatever you say, clown.