The traditional response to this on the FES website is that airplanes aren’t actually flying from one side of the disk to the other. They might go around the periphery to some extent, but outside the disk is probably either a lot of nothing or a very, very large, cold field of ice. So, that would make a trip from the Cape of Good Hope to Cape Horn take much, much longer than a spherical-ish Earth would predict.
That’s why I assign such a low probability to this—that, and the motion of the stars in the Northern and Southern hemispheres working exactly the way they would if the Earth were approximately spherical. If this disk Earth were the case, the stars in the Southern hemisphere would be rotating in the same direction as the stars in the Northern hemisphere, just with a wider radius of rotation, and there would be no axis that the stars rotate about near the south pole; and though I haven’t personally observed this effect, I’m pretty confident that astronomers would have noticed this. (This whole objection got explained away by different “star clouds” in different hemispheres.)
Well, that and the conspiracy.
My initial probability given was probably too low.
The traditional response to this on the FES website is that airplanes aren’t actually flying from one side of the disk to the other. They might go around the periphery to some extent, but outside the disk is probably either a lot of nothing or a very, very large, cold field of ice. So, that would make a trip from the Cape of Good Hope to Cape Horn take much, much longer than a spherical-ish Earth would predict.
That’s why I assign such a low probability to this—that, and the motion of the stars in the Northern and Southern hemispheres working exactly the way they would if the Earth were approximately spherical. If this disk Earth were the case, the stars in the Southern hemisphere would be rotating in the same direction as the stars in the Northern hemisphere, just with a wider radius of rotation, and there would be no axis that the stars rotate about near the south pole; and though I haven’t personally observed this effect, I’m pretty confident that astronomers would have noticed this. (This whole objection got explained away by different “star clouds” in different hemispheres.)
Well, that and the conspiracy.
My initial probability given was probably too low.