Nukehasslefan
Winger
That's the whole point. It is not a globe you view your horizon on, in my opinion.Except for the actual horizon offered by the very fact of it being a globe.
The angle is an angle no matter what. It offers a skew from level no matter what.An angle which if measured would be so small that no-one would care unless they had to connect the two with pinpoint accuracy
Pinpoint vision offers you a line of sight.No-one disputes the angles between verticals stood on a globe. They are a result of being stood on a globe. The only problem here is that you are still insisting on pinpoint crosshair vision which we do not have, and your comical inability to understand the minute scale of those angles.
If you are standing plumb and on a level at the same height with two scopes opposite each other, both with crosshair then you are going to see that scope and crosshair from either end.
Standing on a convex Earth would offer you nothing of that because the plumb argument offers you a tilt from either end which means your line of sight is crisscrossed as they met in the middle, meaning you do not get to see the scope crosshairs.
Now we all know this does not happen. There's a very good reason for this. It's because we do not live on a globe.
Not at all.Once more for the hard of thinking, two verticals would need to be something like 50 - 70 miles apart before the angle was so much as one degree.
50 to 70 miles apart would offer you one hell of a crisscross in the centre as both lines met.
You only need a very small distance to kill off a global mindset, in my opinion.