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Referring to the video on top in my previous post,
Here is one comment by the author that clearly explains what he has been answering with these videos regarding distortion:
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David Murphy
David Murphy
2 years ago
Feel free to mock me for asking this but... why is this distortion effect employed? Is it for a wider field of view, because the effect is pleasing or does it suit some kind of pragmatic purpose that I'm not aware of?
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Sly Sparkane
Sly Sparkane
2 years ago
+David Murphy (DaddyMonster) it is simply a distortion caused by the wide angle lens on the camera.. nothing more spectacular than that.. Greater field of view from 1 camera.. FEs like to say [effectively] that when the distortion flattens the horizon below the center at high altitudes, it means the Earth is flat.. Yet cry foul when the exaggerated curve is shown above center..
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This is the same error that Ladislaus has bought into, which is why he cannot understand how high altitude cameras work.
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Ladislaus weakly conforms to the flat-earthers' lie regarding wide angle lenses (that only when the horizon is below the center of the viewing frame is the flattening effect of distortion relevant, while pretending that the curvature exaggerated above center is some kind of violation); and likewise they deliberately overlook the relative heights of distant objects when compared to objects at closer range, because things far away look "smaller due to perspective."
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Anyone with any experience in photography knows that when using a telephoto lens objects at great distance in the background appear relatively LARGER compared to foreground objects. Anyone can see this by having a man stand still 200 feet in front of a large object like a house, and take his picture with the house in the background with a wide angle lens. The house will appear small. Then keeping the man where he is, the cameraman moves away 200 feet further making it 400 feet to the house, and changes lenses to a 200 mm telephoto. Taking another picture, with the man the same size as in the wide angle shot, the house in the telephoto will appear much larger. Therefore it is a FALLACY to say that distant objects always appear smaller. Because when you zoom in on them they appear to be larger, and if you change the distance to the foreground subject, it can be quite deceptive.
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For the record, this video (above) is now 2 years old.
The video it rebutts has since been taken down, apparently by the owner - a flat-earther who was embarrassed by being exposed.
The exposure is this video here, which near the end includes a few screen shots of the flat-earther's removed video.