Tthese pictures were taken at 10:35 this morning. I was walking my dogs and the Sun and Moon were both in the sky right above me, right across from each other. Clearly the Earth could not be between the Sun and Moon to cause the "shadow" on the Moon. Am I missing a something or is this all proof one needs to show that the heliocentric model is bullocks? Grant it, it doesn't necessarily prove flat earth, because I could be standing on the top part of the ball observing this, but nobody can say the Earth is causing the Moon Shadow correct? I'm try steel man the heliocentric argument and I got nothing.
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THE FLAT EARTH
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The earth is not what causes the shadow (dark part) of the moon. That is a misconception. It is the position of the sun relative to the moon and our position viewing it.
Shine a flashlight (sun) on a ball (moon) in a dark room. It will light up half of the ball (moon). If you are looking at the ball from the the direction of the flashlight it will look like a full moon. If you look at it from the side it will look like a half moon, etc. As you look at the ball (moon) from different angles without moving the flashlight you will see all phases of the moon.