Quote:
Originally Posted by FatZ2018
Neither one of those models work for a flat earth.
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Wow, you certainly make a powerful argument!
How about explaining why, exactly, you think they don't? Feel free to use your own models, bearing in mind that by "your own" I mean
your own. Had you bothered to read this thread before butting in so rudely (where exactly
IS your introduction thread, by the way?) then you will find that we have seen it all before.
I notice that you haven't addressed Sister Basilissa's rebuttal of your sloppy claim:
Quote:
Originally Posted by FatZ2018
True it does happen it is usually at dawn and dusk but never at night. So it's not as invalid as you think it would be.
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(I assume by the "you" in "not as invalid as you think it would be" you mean you, i.e. FATZO18, not us?)
Quote:
Originally Posted by Basilissa
And equally often at late morning, early afternoon, or any other time of day. (Which is why solar eclipses don't occur exclusively at down or dusk, but at any time).
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(By the way, Sister Bas dear, my boys did a project on this over the summer and concluded from their carefully recorded data that - at least during June - the moon was visible in the sky during daylight hours pretty much as often as it was not. They didn't mention that the sun was never visible at night. Perhaps I should have marked them down and punished them for not stating the obvious? )