MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,044
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
Perspective
the art of drawing solid objects on a two-dimensional surface so as to give the right impression of their height, width, depth, and position in relation to each other when viewed from a particular point.
Below is a photo of the Thorntonbank wind farm off the coast of Belgium.
Perspective viewing is a scale. It's obvious that as an object gets further away from you it's going to look smaller. We all know this from personal experience.
As wind turbines get farther away from you, one who believes in a flat earth model and uses the perspective argument would say the entire object would have to appear smaller and eventually could not be seen from a great distance.
They cannot account for the following picture. Only the bottoms of the wind turbines disappear from view. The tops of the blades are still plainly visible.
A wind turbine tower is about the same diameter as the thickness of the wind turbine blades.
If the earth and water were flat, and the blades are still visible, the tower should still be visible since they are the same size and physically attached to each other. Yet the towers are not visible. Yet you can watch the blades rotate below and above the horizon. Since flat earth believers say the water is flat, that vision should never, ever happen. The closer ones appear fully, and each one behind it is either dropping into the sea, or going beyond the horizon line. The further they get away, the farther below the horizon line they get. It has nothing to do with perspective, which is a scale. It's an observation that something has come up between the observer and the object. That something is the surface of the earth, be it a huge expanse of flat prairie or a large body of water, it's the surface of the earth, which is round, not flat. If it were flat, nothing would be blocking the view of the bottom of the object.
On a flat earth, you would be able to re-view them in a telescope. You can't, because they are below the horizon on a globe. It's just that simple.
the art of drawing solid objects on a two-dimensional surface so as to give the right impression of their height, width, depth, and position in relation to each other when viewed from a particular point.
Below is a photo of the Thorntonbank wind farm off the coast of Belgium.
Perspective viewing is a scale. It's obvious that as an object gets further away from you it's going to look smaller. We all know this from personal experience.
As wind turbines get farther away from you, one who believes in a flat earth model and uses the perspective argument would say the entire object would have to appear smaller and eventually could not be seen from a great distance.
They cannot account for the following picture. Only the bottoms of the wind turbines disappear from view. The tops of the blades are still plainly visible.
A wind turbine tower is about the same diameter as the thickness of the wind turbine blades.
If the earth and water were flat, and the blades are still visible, the tower should still be visible since they are the same size and physically attached to each other. Yet the towers are not visible. Yet you can watch the blades rotate below and above the horizon. Since flat earth believers say the water is flat, that vision should never, ever happen. The closer ones appear fully, and each one behind it is either dropping into the sea, or going beyond the horizon line. The further they get away, the farther below the horizon line they get. It has nothing to do with perspective, which is a scale. It's an observation that something has come up between the observer and the object. That something is the surface of the earth, be it a huge expanse of flat prairie or a large body of water, it's the surface of the earth, which is round, not flat. If it were flat, nothing would be blocking the view of the bottom of the object.
On a flat earth, you would be able to re-view them in a telescope. You can't, because they are below the horizon on a globe. It's just that simple.