I'm not pretty, and not a Sungenis follower, whatever that means, but I'll explain it to you.
First of all, the central thesis of the movie is not geocentrism, it's questioning the Copernican Principle, the belief that Earth is not in a privileged location in the universe. Basically, all of modern astrophysics and cosmology depends on that belief, that can't be verified. Some people, including Sungenis and his co-author, Dr. Bennet, believe that if the Copernican Principle is ignored, all other observational evidence available points to a purely newtonian Earth-centered universe strongly resembling the tychonean model. That's not the only possible outcome.
Will one of Sungenis's followers please come explain how the sun and the other planets, let alone the rest of the universe, could possibly revolve around the Earth.
Simple. In their model, the Earth is located exactly where the barycenter of the whole universe is. The whole universe is spinning around like a gyroscope, and the center doesn't move.
How could we have sent anything to Mars if that were true?
It has nothing to do with that. Space travel involves only relative movement, so, the Earth's movement relative to the Sun and to Mars is important, but not whether any of them is really moving relative to an absolute reference frame. As a matter of fact, during launch and most orbital maneuvers in Earth orbit, the coordinate system used is geocentric. What Sungenis and Bennet claim is simply that the ECI frame used is actually absolute. It's a simple change of coordinate system.
reply
share