Why isn't it daytime everywhere on earth if the earth is flat? Once it comes up over the horizon, it should be shedding light on all of the earth at once, just at different angles.
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The flat earthers think it's a spotlight that rotates, beaming its light down on different parts of the earth.
Or MAYBE the flat earth is wobbling around like a top!Which makes no sense because the sun obviously touches (and sinks below) the horizon every day.
If it was a spotlight, the sun would never touch the horizon because it would always be high up in the sky. Some simple trigonometry:
If the Sun is 3000 miles above the flat Earth disc, then in order for the Sun to get within 5 degrees of the horizon from an observer on the disc, it needs to be more than 34000 miles away from the observer.
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In order for the sun to touch the horizon, it has to be infinitely distant.
I have never understood the "spot light" argument.
Clearly, the sun touches the horizon every day. So either time zones don't exist or....
Or MAYBE the flat earth is wobbling around like a top!
Or MAYBE the flat earth is wobbling around like a top!
I hope we've driven them underground, although I doubt it. They'll emerge soon.I have noticed that, so far, no Flat-Earth proponents have responded to my question.
They appear if you say "dumb, dumb, dumb."I have noticed that, so far, no Flat-Earth proponents have responded to my question.
Flat Earthers do not believe in "simple trigonometry".Which makes no sense because the sun obviously touches (and sinks below) the horizon every day.
If it was a spotlight, the sun would never touch the horizon because it would always be high up in the sky. Some simple trigonometry:
If the Sun is 3000 miles above the flat Earth disc, then in order for the Sun to get within 5 degrees of the horizon from an observer on the disc, it needs to be more than 34000 miles away from the observer.
![]()
In order for the sun to touch the horizon, it has to be infinitely distant.
I have never understood the "spot light" argument.
Clearly, the sun touches the horizon every day. So either time zones don't exist or....
Which makes no sense because the sun obviously touches (and sinks below) the horizon every day.
If it was a spotlight, the sun would never touch the horizon because it would always be high up in the sky. Some simple trigonometry:
when my Aussie friends claim they're sleeping when I'm having lunch it's all a clever prank
That's too logical. FE'rs don't like logic.It's abundantly easy to show that the earth is round, rotates about an axis, and revolves around the sun with all the math, science, and technology available to us today--but it ultimately means nothing to someone whose response to anything that doesn't fit their narrative is "that's part of the conspiracy".
One can easily demonstrate that the earth is round and spins about its axis with nothing more than a Foucault pendulum.
It's not hard, it's abundantly easy--but the flat earther has a cognative dissonance that refuses to accept the most basic of basics.
-CryptoLutheran