Twelve questions for u/Eisenhorn
(www.youtube.com)
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I agree that some of the questions are nonsense/poorly phrased (including this one) but surely you don't need to willfully misinterpret the questions and make strawman claims in order to criticize them.
As you can see in my transcribed list of the questions, this question is about large bodies of water - the example given is a lake hundreds of miles long which freezes over and demonstrably lacks the curve that it ought to have.
No one but you claimed that water droplets don't exist.
There is obviously no distance which would require the world to be any particular shape (flat, spherical, dodecahedron, etc.)
Question literally says "Why haven't we ever seen curved water"
Yes, it does - and i agree that it is poorly worded/phrased - but it does not claim that water droplets don't exist. That is your willful misinterpretation of it to create a strawman / falsely claim that they said/meant something they plainly didn't.
Such rhetorical tricks shouldn't be necessary - don't you agree?
Do you think that the questions posed in the video have any merit?
First answer; some of them, yes.
Second answer; all questions have merit - even the ostensibly stupid ones.
The question you were misinterpreting, for example, is certainly worth exploring - even though i agree that it is phrased poorly.
A better rephrasing (perhaps) would be, "if large bodies of water truly curve convexly the way the globe model describes - then why don't we see that curve even in frozen lakes which are hundreds of miles long?"
The bigger trouble with most all of these questions is that they won't be all that illuminating to the disinterested or the skeptical. There are "standard" answers available to all of them - which ndt, you, or anyone could provide.
The conversation and joint exploration of such questions is what is valuable/interesting, not the "quiz".
Again, using the rephrased example : a few common answers spring to mind -
we can't see that curvature, even in frozen lakes, because we are so relatively small and that curve is so relatively large.
we can see/perceive that curvature but only in, for instance, the observing of objects receding disappearing bottom first and vice versa.
we can see that curvature but only if we get far enough away from it - like from space.
An even better phrasing, getting closer to the real issue, would be : if the surface of water curves the way the globe model describes, then why hasn't anyone ever directly measured it - like on a frozen lake multiple miles long for instance?
For the target audience (ndt and those with similar worldviews), i say it is. Their reflexive response will be the "meniscus defense". Exactly what eisenhorn did.
I appreciate why it does not appear poorly worded to you, or perhaps to me - because we know exactly what he means and would not misconstrue it the same way others commonly would.
Lol, it is to be expected though. "Q: Why don't we see curved water? A: We do, they are called water droplets!", is completely reasonable and the expected/default response from those of the presumptive (and ubiquitously taught) worldview. Which is why such questions directed at them should be more carefully worded.
Lol. I think it is important to have empathy, and understanding in these interactions. Even when met with hostility and even belligerence. Irrational anger/ire against the topic is still earnest interest in it - after all! Many of us researchers begin our journey this way.
We can't, and shouldn't, take responsibility for their behavior - only our own! We should remember that these ostensible "opponents", assuming them earnest, are actually fellow students (or aspiring) with differing views. If our views are correct, and/or theirs are incorrect (or vice versa) - continued collaborative discussion/exploration is the most important thing. Argument is for idiots. There is no "winning" a conversation, and the earnest pursuit of truth (and further will to share it) is not a silly contest (nor should it be allowed to devolve into it).