The model the Greeks proposed is clearly wrong when it comes to things that are far away. The simple fact is that the lines touch. There may be varying explanations for why they touch.
It might have something to do with resolution. It might also be more than that. For instance, if we shine a laser beam at the point on railroad tracks where they appear to touch in the distance, the beam will widen and touch both of the tracks at the same time.
Are you really persisting with this?
The simple fact is that the lines do not touch, they only appear to touch!You claim "There may be varying explanations for why they touch." NO, they DO NOT TOUCH, they appear to touch!
The diverging laser beam means nothing at all. All the laser beam, a spotlight or the sun does is
illuminate the railway tracks.
We are NOT looking at the laser beam and how much its beam diverges has absolutely nothing to do with the case.
There are cases when we are looking at the source of the light, such as:
- looking directly at the laser pointer (with appropriate protective eyewear)
- looking directly at the sun (again with appropriate protective eyewear)
- looking directly at stars at light.
In all these cases the apparent size of the object (measured as the angle subtended at the eye) is simple the (size of the object)/(distance to the object) so for these cases the apparent sizes would be at a "guess" (taking the laser pointer at 3 miles - where I claimed the railway lines converged):
- Guess 1 mm (0.025") diameter - apparent size (0.039")/(3 x 12 x 5280") = 2.1x10-7 rad or 0.043" of arc, far too small to resolve.
- (Globe) Sun's diameter = 900,000 miles, Sun's distance = 93,000,000 miles, so apparent size = 900,000/93,000,000 = 0.01 rad or 0.55° - obviously visible.
- Say Alpha Centauri Estimated diameter = 1,100,000 miles, estimated distance = 4.37 ly or 2.57x1013 miles, so apparent size = 0.009" of arc, far too small to resolve.
I am using Globe figures as the FE supporters seem to have no idea of how big the stars might be.
As I posted before a simple test on whether lines meet is to simply go there and check it out, as with the TGV analogy in my previous post.
Of course this is only practical for achievable distances.
But the bottom line is that your diverging laser beam means absolutely nothing.
We all know that a laser beam has a finite (though very small) divergence angle - but so what, other light sources have much bigger divergent angles.
The sun's light shines over a very large angle (a full sphere), but this has not the slightest effect on the apparent size of objects we see!