Re: Is the Earth an enclosed technologically created world, and NOT a globe?
The attraction of flat earth ideas may be that they are a theory that purports to explain the Matrix, i.e. that everything is not as it seems, we are food for something else, being farmed, and anything that conflicts with this idea is just part of the matrix control system. ("Matrix" is being here used in the sense of the kind of levels of reality shown in the Wachowski brothers' film.)
If the Matrix is a useful way of looking at the world in a Castanedan sense, maybe the flat earth idea could be compared with David Icke's theory of reptilian royals, i.e. there is some level at which it makes sense (the 'Matrix' part of it), but the idea has been run off the rails into an overly physical explanation.
Another thought that occurs to me is that for most purposes it doesn't actually matter much whether the earth is a sphere or flat. If I were an astrophysicist whose purpose was to describe the world accurately, or a space-miner on an errand to retrieve minerals from the moon, then yes it would matter. If I just want to fly from New Zealand to the UK via Singapore and Dubai, and come back via Chicago and Hawaii, it doesn't really matter much, to my travel experience, whether the plane actually flies around the globe one way and comes back the other way, or whether the pilot tales me on some convoluted flight paths over a flat surface. What would matter is really just whether the pilot gets me where I wish to go on time, without crashing the plane.
I think this is an interesting line of thought.trendsetter37 said:After reading through the thread and following the flow of how it has progressed, I am beginning to think (as others have pointed out) that the importance of this discussion does not have anything to do with the Earth being flat or round but rather what happens to a person psychologically and mentally when confronted with egregious lies.
The attraction of flat earth ideas may be that they are a theory that purports to explain the Matrix, i.e. that everything is not as it seems, we are food for something else, being farmed, and anything that conflicts with this idea is just part of the matrix control system. ("Matrix" is being here used in the sense of the kind of levels of reality shown in the Wachowski brothers' film.)
If the Matrix is a useful way of looking at the world in a Castanedan sense, maybe the flat earth idea could be compared with David Icke's theory of reptilian royals, i.e. there is some level at which it makes sense (the 'Matrix' part of it), but the idea has been run off the rails into an overly physical explanation.
Another thought that occurs to me is that for most purposes it doesn't actually matter much whether the earth is a sphere or flat. If I were an astrophysicist whose purpose was to describe the world accurately, or a space-miner on an errand to retrieve minerals from the moon, then yes it would matter. If I just want to fly from New Zealand to the UK via Singapore and Dubai, and come back via Chicago and Hawaii, it doesn't really matter much, to my travel experience, whether the plane actually flies around the globe one way and comes back the other way, or whether the pilot tales me on some convoluted flight paths over a flat surface. What would matter is really just whether the pilot gets me where I wish to go on time, without crashing the plane.