Seasons and Weather

Presented as proof of heliocentricity. Seasons happen on the earth. They are inherently Geocentrospheric. Weather happens on earth. It is inherently Geocentrospheric. Seasons happen because the sun has a helical spiral orbit that progresses toward the South pole for six months, then back towards the North pole for six months. This is empirically observed as …

Eclipses

Presented as proof of heliocentricity. Eclipses of the sun or moon are observed from the earth. The phenomenon is caused by an alignment of the sun, moon and earth, or the sun, earth and moon. They are predicted using historical observations that were also made from the earth. The phenomenon is both inherently and empirically …

Coriolis Effect

It is not possible to prove that the earth is rotating. Experimental results which have formerly been used as a way to prove that the earth has daily rotation are examples of GDE on a stationary earth.

Stellar Spectroscopy

Stellar spectroscopy conveniently ignores the possibility that stars are reflecting sunlight and incorporates itself into one of the most intricate examples of circular reasoning ever devised. Circular reasoning is a problem in science where people make up fiction that suits their narrative, then use the fiction to rationalize more fiction. A good example is heliocentricity. …

Transit of Venus

Any time that someone uses the transit of Venus as proof of heliocentricity they’re demonstrating that their knowledge of the subject matter is at or below a superficial level.

Retrograde Motion

Retrograde motion is often described as a "big problem" for the Geocentrospheric model, but this exposes a failure by those who believe this to comprehend two concepts frame of reference and relative motion.