Thanks Bob? No, thanks Walter (Bislin)

1 year ago
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Thanks Bob? No, thanks Walter (Bislin)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=baEpd3XshVQ&ab_channel=kevinsamuel

Our eyes are spherical and camera lenses give us the same results. Because of atmospheric interference we can’t see forever, and there is a such thing as perspective and a vanishing point. Mix all that together and you’re left with a azimuthal grid of vision or a dome view that’s personal to each observer. This is how and why the fluffy white clouds above your head go and smash into the horizon in the distance 360 degrees around you. They aren’t actually doing this in reality but do appear to. If you drove to any point where the clouds touch the horizon they would actually be the same height as your starting point. It doesn’t do this because of a pretend ball earth. Your dome view moved with you so when you look back where you were the clouds would again appear to be touching the horizon. Here are videos to help.

How we see explained!
https://youtu.be/baEpd3XshVQ

Perspective
https://youtu.be/rGPFyfsnYIA

Why can’t we see Polaris from everywhere on the flat earth?
https://youtu.be/V_RceH0-hSk

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