How can the sun shine on the bottom of the clouds but not on the top of the clouds on flat earth?
for the globe theory to be true it must be literally true that the sun goes below the height of the clouds whereas most flat earthers would expect the sun to always be above the clouds and so suggest focusing on how to explain the light on the bottom via reflection off of water however this forgets to explain why its not shining on the top of the clouds which it always would on flat earth
1 cycle has 5 steps
#1 Darkness
properly basic
#2 first few minutes of the sunrise
with the proper cloud pattern with a sufficient distance between you and the cloud and the cloud and the sun so as to ensure the sun isn't obscured you can observe the sun shining on the bottom of the clouds and explicitly not on the top of the clouds
#3 most of all day
properly basic
#4 last few minutes of the sunset
with the proper cloud pattern with a sufficient distance between you and the cloud and the cloud and the sun so as to ensure the sun isn't obscured you can observe the sun shining on the bottom of the clouds and explicitly not on the top of the clouds
#5 Darkness
properly basic
6 Replies
So what's your proof the sun goes below the clouds?
The ground has nothing to do with clouds or the sun; both of which are in the sky. Note: The sky is not the ground and the ground is not the sky.
the light hitting the bottom of clouds is reflected light form the sun.
Glad I can help :helpmeplz:
The light hitting the bottom of clouds during sunset is not from the sun, for the sun travels far enough during sunset to light those clouds in our perspective.
The light we see hitting the bottom of clouds is in my opinion, light of the day on earth which was created by God before the sun. The light is not from the sun because the sun is small and it couldn't illuminate much further.