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Difference between revisions of "Thomas Winship"

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some of them equal in importance to our own Sun himself, and
 
some of them equal in importance to our own Sun himself, and
 
others vastly his superior; that these worlds, inhabited by sentient
 
others vastly his superior; that these worlds, inhabited by sentient
beings, are without numbers and occupy s ace boundless in extent
+
beings, are without numbers and occupy space boundless in extent
and illimitable in duration; the whole op these interlaced bodies
+
and illimitable in duration; the whole of these interlaced bodies
 
being subject to, and supported by, universal gravitation, the
 
being subject to, and supported by, universal gravitation, the
 
foundation and father of the whole fabric.
 
foundation and father of the whole fabric.

Revision as of 17:17, 25 June 2020

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).

Quotes

  “ Modern astronomical teaching affirms that the world we live on is a globe, which rotates, revolves and spins away in space at brain-reeling rates of speed; that the Sun is a million and a half times the volume of the earth-globe, and nearly a hundred million miles distant from it; that the moon is about a quarter the size of earth; that it receives all its light from the Sun, and is thus only a reflector, and not a giver of light; that it attracts the body of the earth and thus causes the tides; that the stars are worlds and Suns, some of them equal in importance to our own Sun himself, and others vastly his superior; that these worlds, inhabited by sentient beings, are without numbers and occupy space boundless in extent and illimitable in duration; the whole of these interlaced bodies being subject to, and supported by, universal gravitation, the foundation and father of the whole fabric.

To fanciful minds and theoretical speculators, the so-called ‘science’ of modern astronomy furnishes a field, unsurpassed in any science for the unrestrained license of the imagination, and the building up of a complicated conjuration of absurdities such as to overawe the simpleton and make him gape with wonder; to deceive even those who truly believe their assumptions to be facts.” ”
                  —Thomas Winship, ”Zetetic Cosmogony”