Logo

If the world was flat, would it be possible to see Mount Everest if it was on the other side of the Earth on a clear sunny day?

16.06.2025 09:17

If the world was flat, would it be possible to see Mount Everest if it was on the other side of the Earth on a clear sunny day?

You cannot see farther than about 280 miles across the surface. Ever. No matter how hard you try. The only way, and I mean ONLY way to see farther than 280 miles is to fly.

OP: “If the world was flat, would it be possible to see Mount Everest if it was on the other side of the Earth on a clear sunny day?”

And if you can see farther from the air, why can’t you do it on the ground??

If everyone in Russia dropped into holes in the ground only never to return, would that be good for NATO and international peacekeepers? Can we convince Russians to be less diabolical, so they coexist? Does Putin stink like doo doo in the commode?

And yes, at that distance, the haze prevents line of sight too. But we know the curve exists in many other ways.

And you cannot see the top of Everest from the surface more than 280 miles away either, because the Earth is a sphere.

Well, no, not from everywhere on Earth, my friend. As many people have pointed out in the comments, the atmospheric gets pretty thick at distances comparable to the distance obscured by Earth’s curvature. That's why flat earthers love to harp on that point.

Why do I keep dreaming of my mom, who recently passed away from cancer, still being sick and in pain?

If the Earth were flat, you would think the telescope on top of Muana Kea should be able to see Everest. It can't. It can't see Mount Shasta in California. It can't even see Kawaikini on Kauai. It cannot see another mountain top more than 280 miles away because the Earth is a sphere.