It's super simple, I first too the claim that the earth doesn't curve seriously, then applied myself to test this. And I found that the horizon doesn't curve. Using math, using logic, scientific method.
It all made sense that the psy op is to confuse people with fake flat earth bible crap. But the obvious truth is the the horizon doesn't curve. Then, so many more things become obvious, planes, tides, time zones seasons, etc
I'm an ex glober. I was like everyone else and used to regurgitate the same thing. Then someone asked me to calculate the slope of the curve. I found a lot of online tools, made my own excel with the trig formula for a sphere that's 24,900 in circumference, and the easiest approximation is 8 inches per mile^squared. So, 10 miles is 8 inches x 10^2 = 800 inches, about a 7 story building.
Don't you think, from the top of a mountain where you can see ten miles, that you would notice that much? What about 50 miles. or just 5 miles. Then look at the first few stories of buildings that should be behind the curve. It's actually pretty obvious in hundred of other ways. But everyone is just way to programmed to give it a second thought
Its 24,900 miles. Not big. The slope you would see is much steeper than you follow to believe.
I'm not a lazy fuck and actually thought about, did some math and applied common sense. Laws of optical perspective. I remember being this gullible
It's super simple, I first too the claim that the earth doesn't curve seriously, then applied myself to test this. And I found that the horizon doesn't curve. Using math, using logic, scientific method.
It all made sense that the psy op is to confuse people with fake flat earth bible crap. But the obvious truth is the the horizon doesn't curve. Then, so many more things become obvious, planes, tides, time zones seasons, etc
Why would anyone expect the horizon to "curve"? The earth is big, we should not to expect to see a curve with our eyes.
So you are a Geo Centrist, not a flat earther. Yes?
I'm an ex glober. I was like everyone else and used to regurgitate the same thing. Then someone asked me to calculate the slope of the curve. I found a lot of online tools, made my own excel with the trig formula for a sphere that's 24,900 in circumference, and the easiest approximation is 8 inches per mile^squared. So, 10 miles is 8 inches x 10^2 = 800 inches, about a 7 story building.
Don't you think, from the top of a mountain where you can see ten miles, that you would notice that much? What about 50 miles. or just 5 miles. Then look at the first few stories of buildings that should be behind the curve. It's actually pretty obvious in hundred of other ways. But everyone is just way to programmed to give it a second thought
The globe is big. Plus, there are those experiments with ships and the crow's nest.
You may not see a curve (?) but you can see that things will be obscured at lower heights.
Its 24,900 miles. Not big. The slope you would see is much steeper than you follow to believe. I'm not a lazy fuck and actually thought about, did some math and applied common sense. Laws of optical perspective. I remember being this gullible