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Reason: None provided.

BTW bud... The horizon is absolutely curved and you can see it with your naked eye.

You can observe it's curve by noting that it (the horizon) wraps around you 360 degrees in a perfect circle, and comes back to where it started.

That's one curve you can observe.

Then you will also be able to observe that the circumference of the circle drawn by the horizon increases the higher up you go, and decreases the closer to the ground you are, but is still always perfectly circular...

This shows that the ground is curving downwards away from you in all directions.

Both curves are that of a perfect circle... Each one curving on a different axis both uniform and identical everywhere on the planet.

On flat earth there would HAVE TO be parts of the planet with a non-uniform horizon in order to account for the edges...

And yet there is no evidence of any part of the world where the horizon isn't uniform and identical to everywhere else, and no-one has observed an edge anywhere.

33 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

BTW bud... The horizon is absolutely curved and you can see it with your naked eye.

You can observe it's curve by noting that it (the horizon) wraps around 360 degrees in a perfect circle, and comes back to where it started.

That's one curve you can observe.

Then you will also be able to observe that the circumference of the circle drawn by the horizon increases the higher up you go, and decreases the closer to the ground you are, but is still always perfectly circular...

This shows that the ground is curving downwards away from you in all directions.

Both curves are that of a perfect circle... Each one curving on a different axis both uniform and identical everywhere on the planet.

On flat earth there would HAVE TO be parts of the planet with a non-uniform horizon in order to account for the edges...

And yet there is no evidence of any part of the world where the horizon isn't uniform and identical to everywhere else, and no-one has observed an edge anywhere.

33 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

BTW bud... The horizon is absolutely curved and you can see it with your naked eye.

You can observe it's curve by noting that it (the horizon) wraps around 360 degrees in a perfect circle, and comes back to where it started.

That's one curve you can observe.

Then you will also be able to observe that the circumference of the circle drawn by the horizon increases the higher up you go, and decreases the closer to the ground you are, but is still always perfectly circular...

This shows that the ground is curving downwards away from you in all directions.

Both curves are that of a perfect circle... Each one curving on a different axis both uniform and identical everywhere on the planet.

On flat earth there would HAVE TO be parts of the planet with a non-uniform horizon in order to account for being able to see the edges...

And yet there is no evidence of any part of the world where the horizon isn't uniform and identical to everywhere else, and no-one has observed an edge anywhere.

33 days ago
1 score