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Old 03-16-09, 11:16 AM   #12
Frame57
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sailor Steve
Quote:
Originally Posted by Frame57
In Columbus' day people of science and sea faring men stil thought the earth was flat and that you could fall off the edge of it.
Actually that's not true either. Eratosthenes of Cyrene calculated the diameter of the Earth in the second century B.C., and Claudius Ptolemaeus, or Ptolemy, had done further calculations not much after that. Columbus' chief opponent didn't believe the Earth was flat, but that it was much larger than Columbus himself claimed. It turned out that he was right and old Cristoforo Columbo was wrong.

The belief that they thought the Earth was flat is an invention of Washington Irving.
So, you are saying no one thought the earth was flat? It was a common belief back then. Where in hell do you think the idea of "sailing of the edge of the world came from". Of course some obviously did get this by simply placing two sticks apart and calculating the shadow of the sun. But the idea was not mainstream by any stretch...
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