The Snockerty Friddle
Winger
Or exactly as is to be expected.Higher elevation, just like a crow's nest on a ship enables a person to see farther.
On a globe, this would be impossible.
Or, as it is acually known, the horizonYou see, in the distance, you always have your theoretical horizon line.
No, you can see as far as you can see, height does not matter except in that it allows you to see further across a curved surface.If you elevate your sight your theoretical horizon line rises with you and offers you farther sight into the distance, without having to alter your eye line.
It wontA scope with crosshair will show this to be correct.
The answer is obviously "why include the scope in this case?"Now it comes down to the other part whether people want to believe they can see farther on a globe by elevation with that very same scenario.
The answer is absolutely not.
It's easily demonstrated that anything hidden by curvature is less hidden if your viewpoint is raised. You dont need a scope and you dont need to insist on level sight.
And as several have explained before, the pinpoint view exists only in your theory, it's not how the eye works and even the most powerful of scopes does not reduce the field of view to a pinpoint.As I pointed out before. If you raised a level scope your pinpoint on the crosshair would not offer you any angle down to the ground or sea. It would offer you nothing more than the sky because the ground and the sky will not intersect due to a curve downwards no matter how small or large.
A downward curve would be just that and offer you absolutely nothing through a horizontal pinpoint view through a scope.
It doesn't matter if you offer it or not, it exists, it is real and it's how vision works.The only argument that seems to arise with this is when people try to use the field of vision which I clearly do not offer, hence the pinpoint view.