The world looks flat but is actualy round
2007-08-27 11:45:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Jeez! When I was a teen back in 1960s, I worked summer as a laborer and this old guy in my work gang, who was really a half wit, used to say to me “Nick. There must be a God, because who holds the sun and moon up in the sky?”.
I really thought that kind of ignorance had died with the coming of the space age. But some of the questions on Yahoo show me that blind ignorance is alive and well.
And you have to worry about the “half-wittedness” as well.
2007-08-27 18:41:50
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answer #2
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answered by nick s 6
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Because when you want to go someplace, it takes less rocket fuel to just tip the rocket off the edge of it--it just falls quickly instead of having to be boosted up to the sky.
2007-08-28 01:19:46
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answer #3
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answered by Connie B 5
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Its not and if you wana prove someone wrong tell them this.the earth is a three D object called a sphere that circles around the sun and rotates thus the sum "moving" across the sky
2007-08-27 17:38:57
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answer #4
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answered by shanewalker159 3
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Your grammar is poor, and it's not. The Earth is a 3D object that bulges out slightly in the southern hemisphere
2007-08-27 17:27:23
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answer #5
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answered by flibbitygibet 2
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Well, if you define your 'Z` axis as 'up` in reference to gravity, and your 'X` and 'Y' axes as normal to each-other, and don't go too far from the origin,
it might work out OK for you.
2007-08-27 21:16:40
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answer #6
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answered by Irv S 7
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Ummm.... I'm not even sure how to insult you, everything I think of is just way too obvious or way too complex that you won't get it.
2007-08-27 18:02:07
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answer #7
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answered by Kyle G 3
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When I drop my ball on the ground it just stays there.
2007-08-27 17:26:12
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answer #8
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answered by SgtMoto 6
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Because the Kansas School Board says it is. What more proof do you need?
2007-08-27 17:25:46
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answer #9
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answered by Brian L 7
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