If the moon's light is a reflection of the sun's light, why then do we see the moon in the daytime?
Serious question.
Go outside. Everything you see is a reflection of sunlight. Ever seen mountains at sunset? They glow while everything else is dark because they're tall enough to catch sunlight.
Everything you see is the reflection of light. You can see everything else during the day why would the moon be different?. Why would the moon turn invisible in the day?
Electrons emit and absorb light. Electrons in the air.
Riiiight... the air absorbs light. Say it again slowly to your self.
Because of the earth's orbit. It periodically aligns so that the sun's light hits the moon during the day.
How about the Full Moon during the mid afternoon? Does that make sense to you? How does the earth orbit to Allow a full moon to show up in the afternoon. Speaking off, why is the moons shadow during an eclipse only 33 miles when the diameter of the moon is 2,000 miles? No object in the history of shadows is less than 1% the size of object. the shadow of an object is always minimum the size of the object. It can't be smaller.
That’s definitely not in the least bit plausible. Shine lights at different angles on your meth pipe. Some shadows created will be larger than the pipe, some smaller based on angle and intensity.
You can speak nonsense but it's only nonsense.
Are you Jewish or a sociopath?
You can speak nonsense but it's only nonsense.
Are you Jewish or a sociopath?
Those two things aren't mutually exclusive. Your question isn't a question. You're asserting a claim with nothing to back it up, but doing so in the form of a question to avoid scrutiny.
True, they're not.
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