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  1. Dec 2, 2017 · In the 4th century BC, Aristotle provided some of the first evidence showing that Earth was round: ships disappear hull first when sailing over the horizon, Earth casts a round shadow on the...

  2. Nov 20, 2018 · What kind of evidence would lead you to believe the Earth is round? Nate Thompson said he’s conducted too many experiments that disprove our world as a “spinning ball.” “It’s so ...

  3. Mar 27, 2020 · Michael Marshall, project director of the Good Thinking Society in the U.K., talks about flat earth belief and its relationship to conspiracy theories and other antiscience activities.

  4. Jul 13, 2017 · This conspiracy theory alleges that the Earth is actually a flat disk surrounded by an impenetrable ring of ice that we call Antarctica.

    • Edge of The World
    • Turtles All The Way Down
    • How Unenlightened They Were

    But what exactly is a "flat Earth theory"? In fact, there never has been anything called "the flat Earth theory". Different cultures at different times have posited a staggeringly diverse array worldviews which cannot easily be summed up with the phrase "flat Earth." Nor is the idea of a flat Earth something that is exclusive to the Western world. ...

    However, from at least the 6th century BCE, the theory of the flat Earth began to fall out of favour. By the time we get to Aristotle in the 4th century BCE, the idea of a spherical Earth is commonplace, at least among the educated classes. And by the 1st Century BCE it is considered an uncontroversial truth. Having said that, the theory of a flat ...

    But, if the flat Earth serves as a kind if myth or fantasy for those who believe in it, there are also myths aboutthe flat Earth that are just as widespread. One of the most widely propagated myths in the contemporary world is the belief that Columbus was advised by the Catholic Church to abandon his journey on the basis that he risked falling off ...

  5. Dec 7, 2022 · Claim: The Earth is flat because cities cannot be upside-down. Our rating: False. Gravity pulls objects to the center, no matter where people or cities are located on Earth.

  6. Key Findings. On a nationwide U.S. survey, around 10 percent of respondents agreed with conspiracy claims that the Earth is flat, NASA faked the Moon landings, or COVID-19 vaccinations implant tracking microchips.

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