Quote (Leevee @ Jan 13 2017 12:23am)
http://i.imgur.com/QO0Zifu.pngThis image shows a person (black), the flat Earth (green) and the sun (orange/yellow). Disclaimer: sizes and lengths are not taken into account. Possibly the green line should stop earlier or should continue further, but that's not really of importance right now.
What I'm confused about, is the fact that this seemingly happens when you watch the sun set on the sea/ocean. The sun comes closer and closer to the horizon (as you explained with perspective lines), but then at some point it actually dips
below the horizon. In other words, the perceived distance between the horizon and the sun becomes not just zero, but
negative.
This is what I'm asking you to explain. Purely based on the theory of perspective planes as you explain it, this should be impossible.
The problem here is that your stuck thinking in a 2 d side view which is completely wrong and It is made to make you think ball earth is real, see if you watched the video i posted you would already know this .
You need to understand much more about perspective and how perspective lines relate to reality.
This image is 3d perspective - do you understand what the 3 d mean - what are the 3 dimension in 3d?
This post was edited by card_sultan on Jan 13 2017 04:33am