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Author Topic: The only thing a Flat Earther fears - a sphere itself  (Read 5329 times)

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Re: The only thing a Flat Earther fears - a sphere itself
« Reply #25 on: May 19, 2018, 09:45:47 AM »
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You must have missed the joke then because the joke's on you.
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The only thing flat-earthers have to phear is'phere itself.      :fryingpan:
:cheers:                

Re: The only thing a Flat Earther fears - a sphere itself
« Reply #26 on: May 21, 2018, 04:38:41 AM »
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The only thing flat-earthers have to fear is sphere itself.   :incense:
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Looks like Ladislaus threw in the towel on this one.
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He knows when he's been bested, at least.


Offline Meg

Re: The only thing a Flat Earther fears - a sphere itself
« Reply #27 on: May 21, 2018, 09:58:31 AM »
I don't see why humor is so important to the issue. I don't see a sense of humor on other subjects, such as sedevacantism. To me, the sedevacantists lack humor. They tend to be very serious, but that's okay. I don't expect them to joke about it.

Re: The only thing a Flat Earther fears - a sphere itself
« Reply #28 on: May 24, 2018, 03:06:27 AM »
I don't see why humor is so important to the issue. I don't see a sense of humor on other subjects, such as sedevacantism. To me, the sedevacantists lack humor. They tend to be very serious, but that's okay. I don't expect them to joke about it.
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Some day when you realize how ridiculous flat-earthism is, you'll look back at this and laugh.

Re: The only thing a Flat Earther fears - a sphere itself
« Reply #29 on: May 24, 2018, 03:08:16 AM »
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Quote from: Ladislaus on May 15, 2018, 11:24:06 PM
Quote
Interesting picture.  I can't quite make out what is supposed to be 140 miles away and what [is] 190 miles away.  At 140 miles away (starting at an elevation of 500 feet), 8400+ feet should be hidden from view by curvature; at 190 miles, 17,600+ feet.  
I doubt that refraction could explain this.
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No refraction is needed for an explanation.
There doesn't seem to be any refraction going on, not unusual for cold climates.
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You're not using the curvature calculation correctly.
The elevation of the viewer is (supposedly) 500 feet (actually it's probably more like 550 feet but we'll ignore the 50' of error).
The distance to Denali is 120 miles not 140 miles (the correct distance is 120) because the flat-earther's scribbling on the photo is wrong. The "190 miles" arrow is nonsense, because nothing in the photo is that far away.
Check the maps. It's 120 miles.
Therefore, using an accurate calculator that takes these into account, such as this one, you get:
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5,720 ft obscured.
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Take that away from 20,310 ft and you have 14,690 ft visible -- well within reasonable in the picture shown, especially considering the base of Denali mountain range is right about the same as the obscured calculated. (The peaks of the Dutch Hills at Denali's base are 4,500 ft tall and they're not visible in the photo, because they're under the curvature's horizon.)
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The only thing flat-earthers have to fear is sphere itself.   :incense:                              
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Still no reply from Ladislaus.  He's hoping we won't notice but guess what?