Where Is The Moon, Or Once Again About The Eclipse. Flat Or Closed Earth - Alternative View

Where Is The Moon, Or Once Again About The Eclipse. Flat Or Closed Earth - Alternative View
Where Is The Moon, Or Once Again About The Eclipse. Flat Or Closed Earth - Alternative View

Video: Where Is The Moon, Or Once Again About The Eclipse. Flat Or Closed Earth - Alternative View

Video: Where Is The Moon, Or Once Again About The Eclipse. Flat Or Closed Earth - Alternative View
Video: A Strange Object Is Circling Earth Like a Second Moon 2024, May
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But really, with these solar eclipses, a very simple and indicative temka emerges, putting an end to the Jesuit system of modern "astronomy"! Judge for yourself (I'll try to explain it on my fingers) …

The Moon (as we are told) overlaps the Sun for the simple reason that they walk over our heads along very close paths (the difference is something about 5 degrees). The lunar month is 29.5 days, of which two days we do not see the Moon at all. It does not disappear anywhere, of course, just, as we are told, it passes over us during the day and therefore, attention, "is lost in the rays of the Sun." Reread the previous phrase. Again. Do you understand what this means? This means that once every 29.9 days the Moon is so illuminated by the daylight of the Sun that we cannot see it, but at the same time it does not overlap it, and once every few years it does overlap it, and this phenomenon is called a "solar eclipse" … What is this, Karl! If the Jesuit Copernicus was right, then we should observe the solar eclipse EVERY month, i.e. every 29.5 days. Or…

Or we are free to assume that on the usual 29.5 days we do not see the Moon because it is behind the Sun. And the fact that once every few years the Sun overlaps is either a completely different cosmic body (it is called differently in different traditions), or the Moon, but for some reason, it turned out to be in front of the Sun.

That's all. You can refute …;-)

PS Well, almost everything. Because, as we now know for sure after the eclipse of August 21, 2017, the shadow of the "Moon" against the background of the Sun goes in the opposite direction relative to the course of the Moon's motion, which in fact should prove that the Moon does not overlap the Sun at all …