Stravinsk
Composer and Artist on Flat Earth
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2016
- Messages
- 4,562
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Deist
- Political Affiliation
- Conservative
- Marital Status
- Widow/Widower
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- No
I am curious to know, and I don't want to continue being dismissive, how you would explain the mechanism by which the Sun and Moon, presumably much smaller and more proximal than given by scientific consensus, travel about their cyclic trajectories above the proposed Earth plane? Newton's Universal Law of Gravity, and to a better extent, Einstein's General Relativity, explain with a great deal of precision, the orbits of the planets (including Earth) about the sun. What scientific principles explain the motion of the Sun and Moon in the flat-Earth model?
I do not know the mechanism. But what I do know is that "Gravity" doesn't explain a good number of things. It doesn't explain, for example, why the Sun doesn't pull the moon away from Earth when the moon is between the Earth and the Sun in a heliocentric model.
How does gravity explain this? Shouldn't the spin of the tennis ball hold the water to it? It does the exact opposite!
Mark, when you are in a pool of water, do you weigh less? How is it that you can push yourself through the water in all directions?
Density. The water is dense, allowing for movement in any direction. When you step out of the water and onto dry land, the ability to move in all directions or float around is more limited due to lack of density.
How does a beach ball, which weighs next to nothing, when filled with air - defy gravity by floating to the top of water? Buoyancy.
The thing we call "gravity" is a combination of Density, Buoyancy and (when in the air) Aerodynamic drag.
Take a flat piece of paper. If you drop it while standing, how long will it take to hit the ground? I tested this and it took 3½ seconds.
Now crumple the paper into a ball. Now when I drop it it takes 1 second. I didn't change the weight of the paper. The density of the air was neither changed. I changed the object's aerodynamic drag.
But in space - which is supposed to be a vacuum - there is 0 density. A person can move through water easily because of the water's density. We have less movement on land (without mechanisms to change aerodynamic drag) because it (the air) is less dense than the water. But in space - there is nothing. How does one move through nothing?
Last edited: