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[–] 0 pt

Two ships, sailing away, their masts vanish.

[–] 1 pt

The first ship turns to the second ship and says, "Mast you always copy me?"

Sorry - it sounded like the setup for a joke.

[–] -1 pt

Yeah because the human eye can’t see far enough. They can be brought back into view with zoom lens cameras and this has been demonstrated/filmed many times. You can create the same effect with a camera on a floor and dragging something away from it on the flat surface.

https://youtu.be/Ow2MoLQXJsQ

[–] 2 pts

"Ships sails vanish"

You can tell by the laughable arguments that theyve never even questioned it or looked at it unbiasedly for 5 seconds. Hilarious when you consider this is poal, they have the audacity to criticise normies for being as easily mislead as they are. Even more laughable when you consider how easy it is to prove yourself, as an individual with no expensive equipment etc. The epitome of laziness

[–] -1 pt

Things don't vanish bottom up on a flat surface. That is not how perspective works. Because that's not how straight lines work.

Anyone claiming otherwise, or telling you a lens can bring it back, is either lying to you or simply an idiot repeating lies they were told without verifying. Like you are right now.

[–] 1 pt

You can literally test this yourself in 5 minutes with your phone’s camera, a dime and a table. Put your phone’s camera just above the surface of one end of the table and then slowly move the coin away from the camera. You will see the coin disappear bottom up. Then zoom in and you will see the coin reappear. This is due to angular resolution. Our eyes work the same way.

[–] 0 pt

Yes. Things do vanish bottom up on a flat surface. That is how perspective works.

https://youtu.be/5i9K_Ijj7LU

I encourage you to perform this experiment for yourself which can easily be done with your camera phone.