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− | '''Thomas Winship''' (aka '''Rectangle''') was a South African author and Flat Earth advocate working in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. His best known work is ''Zetetic Cosmogony; or Conclusive Evidence that the World is not a Rotating Revolving Globe but a Stationary Plane Circle'' (1899).
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− | ==Quotes==
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− | {{cite2|Modern astronomical teaching affirms that the world we live
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− | on is a globe, which rotates, revolves and spins away in space at
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− | brain-reeling rates of speed; that the Sun is a million and a half
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− | times the volume of the earth-globe, and nearly a hundred million
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− | miles distant from it; that the moon is about a quarter the size of
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− | earth; that it receives all its light from the Sun, and is thus only a
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− | reflector, and not a giver of light; that it attracts the body of the
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− | earth and thus causes the tides; that the stars are worlds and Suns,
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− | some of them equal in importance to our own Sun himself, and
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− | others vastly his superior; that these worlds, inhabited by sentient
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− | beings, are without numbers and occupy space boundless in extent
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− | and illimitable in duration; the whole of these interlaced bodies
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− | being subject to, and supported by, universal gravitation, the
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− | foundation and father of the whole fabric.
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− | To fanciful minds and theoretical speculators, the so-called
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− | ‘science’ of modern astronomy furnishes a field, unsurpassed in
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− | any science for the unrestrained license of the imagination, and
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− | the building up of a complicated conjuration of absurdities such as
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− | to overawe the simpleton and make him gape with wonder; to
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− | deceive even those who truly believe their assumptions to be
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− | facts.|Thomas Winship, Zetetic Cosmogony}}
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− | [[Category:Historical Figures]]
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