"Interesting," the flat-Earther says, unable to find a way to undermine the evidence he had just collected. Naturally, since the Earth is round, the second light is completely obscured by the hole. In the video, the flat-Earther conducts his experiment and reviews the footage he filmed. If the earth is round, the second, more distant hole, should slightly cover the light, accounting for the curvature of the Earth. Here's the theory: if the earth is actually flat, the camera - aimed so that its viewfinder is centred on the holes in the boards - should be able to perfectly record the torch, without any occlusion, when its lifted. A person at a distance further beyond the boards stands with a flashlight. The experiment involves a camera, which is set to film through a pair of two holes carved into a board an a fence and set up in a line but at increasingly further distances. The flat-Earther sets up an experiment he believes will prove the Earth is actually flat. In a clip from the 2018 documentary Behind the Curve, which focuses on flat Earth believers, an adherent to the theory that world is actually a flat plane and not a spheroid manages to undermine his worldview in an experiment gone wrong.
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