I'm so happy you posted this because I'd seen it before, but couldn't find it for later viewing. What this guy is saying is not only true if you try the experiments yourself, it is both simple to understand, as well as a next level intellectual consideration. Art is such a fascinating and heady mind candy for many reasons, but this video specifically conveys details regarding the way light works on spherical things. Observing the behavior of shadows and their operation is undeniable, and unhindered by indoctrination, one can quickly understand the revealing mechanics of shadows. It brings art and science together to demonstrate the truth about creation. I've studied the moon for many hours drawing on information from this video and realized how the crisp edges of it's outer perimeter as well as the way the shadow moves across it in its phases prove it cannot be globular. Fantastic!
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You are entirely wrong, as usual.
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The so-called artist fails to take the same position of viewing that we do from earth.
He shows examples of how shadows on a sphere curve -- but
they do not curve when the light source is directly behind the viewer.
When we see lunar eclipses, the sun is always 180 degrees behind us in the direction opposite the moon.
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Maybe this is too simple for flat-earthdom syndromers to grasp. Figures.
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Flat-earthdom syndromers will believe anything if they can make it fit their fantasyland false-god golden-calf subjectivism.
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What used to be the most ridiculous thread now becomes
proof positive of the ridiculousness of flat-earthdom syndrome!! HAHAHAHAHA
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BTW you missed another excellent opportunity to measure the angle between the sun and the moon at the first quarter this past week.
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But then, to do that, you would have to want to know the truth, which you don't want to know.
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If you really wanted to know, you would be ready to do another experiment during the full moon in a few days from now.
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But, as usual, you have no interest in the truth.
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You'll get out a thermometer and measure the air temperature but say it's the temperature of the moonlight. Duuh.
Wrong experiment!
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The correct experiment involves a 2" iron pipe and a 2x2 tripod, but you don't know what I'm talking about so what's the use?
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