What if the sun did orbit the earth, and the planets and rest of the stars orbited the sun, all things would still match scientifically and all movements such as Focault Pendulum and the Coriolis effect would be caused by the universe rotation and not the earth's rotation. Worth a thought to consider.
@joroma77 I'm not sure I am not a scientist, but off the top of my head I would say no because the coriolos effect is still in play at night when the sun is on the other side of the earth. What verse says the sun scatters the winds? That is interesting.
What if the sun did orbit the earth, and the planets and rest of the stars orbited the sun, all things would still match scientifically and all movements such as Focault Pendulum and the Coriolis effect would be caused by the universe rotation and not the earth's rotation. Worth a thought to consider.
pgfracing 1 year ago
@pgfracing No. It's not worth it.
Dayoldsushy 10 months ago
@pgfracing Couldn't the Coriolis effect be due to the heat of the sun alone? The sun scatters the winds, as the Bible tells us.
joroma77 4 months ago
@joroma77 I'm not sure I am not a scientist, but off the top of my head I would say no because the coriolos effect is still in play at night when the sun is on the other side of the earth. What verse says the sun scatters the winds? That is interesting.
pgfracing 4 months ago