A real honest question:

So I guess I dhsll post the same question again: if you choose to equate how a gas behaves in a sealed container as hoe gases behave on the surface of the planet, and cited it as "a gas will naturally fill a container homogeneously, why is they not the case on the surface of the planet? You previously told me that weight was the reason (and well that is the accepted scientific answer) doesn't that in and of itself disprove the idea of a gas homogeneously filling our atmosphere? I'll give you a hint: gas pressure (or air pressure as most people know it as) is not constant. I previously cited high altitude environments as an example of this, to which you told me that "weight is the cause" and even if I accepted this as a valid point (which I don't? Because again you seem to be cherry picking what you like from actual science) then that idea alone invalidates the gsss pressure law you continually try to apply. Beyond that I would try to ask you this: if you believe air pressure to be constantly the same on earth, then what the hell is wind??

/r/FlatEarthScience Thread Parent