
Although scientific evidence is clear that the Earth is a sphere orbiting the Sun, there are some people around who still think our planet is flat. Social media plays a role.

If you type โflat Earthโ into Google, youโd be joining a group of people that have helped to triple the search term over the last couple of years. In fact, a recent YouGov poll found that only around two-thirds of Americans aged between 18 and 24 believe that the Earth is round.
Although the idea the Earth is flat has been scientifically discredited, there seems to be a growing belief in the conspiracy theory.

So whatโs causing a renewed interest in something thatโs been scientifically disproven for the past two thousand years or more? What does it say about social media? And how did we actually establish that the world is round in the first place?
ROUNDING OUT THE WORLD
Once upon a time, it made sense for people to believe that the Earth was flat, says University of Melbourne cartographer Chandra Jayasuriya. Ships would sail off toward the horizon and often never return, and those people left behind didnโt really have access to information outside of their communities.
โTheir view was egocentric and geocentric. They lived in a village that was the centre of their existence,โโ she says. โThe further away from the village they travelled, the more hostile the environment became.โ
Greek philosophers established that the Earth was round as far back as the third century BC, but it wasnโt until the 15th century that it became commonly accepted.
And itโs getting more traction than some of the other conspiracies out there, like chemtrails (which proposes that a planeโs long-lasting condensation trail is actually made up of chemical or biological agent).
Interest in most of these other far-fetched theories remains stable but the flat-Earth movement is growing, particularly in America. And it has some high-profile supporters.
From basketball players to musicians, rappers to TV hosts, a number of celebrities are jumping on the flat Earth bandwagon.

The first scientific estimates of the Earthโs circumference were made by the Greek mathematician and geographer Eratosthenes in 240 BC. He noted that on the 21st of June that year, in a town called Syene (near modern day Aswan), the reflection of the sun could be seen in a deep well, meaning that it was directly overhead.
But in Alexandria, around 800 kilometres away and almost directly north of Syene, at noon on the same day, the angle of the sun was about seven degrees โ or one-50th of a circle.
If the Earth was actually flat, the angle would be identical in both places.
โFrom this, he concluded that the circumference of the Earth must be 50 times the distance between Syene and Alexandria,โ Ms Jayasuriya adds. โThis gave him a figure that was very close to the actual circumference as we know it now.โ
In 150 AD, Ptolemyโs treatise Geographia laid out a revolutionary system of assigning co-ordinates, expressed in degrees of latitude and longitude, to locations around the world. The mathematician and astronomer assigned these coordinates to more than 8000 places across the known world.
Even though many of the measurements werenโt accurate, Ptolemyโs concept of โglobal mapping co-ordinatesโ โ used to this day – was based on the theory that the Earth was and is, indeed, round.
โAlthough Ptolemyโs original map didnโt survive, the text was rediscovered around 1300 AD and cartographers were able to recreate the mapโ, says Ms Jayasuriya.

As well as observations of the sun and its shadows, Ms Jayasuriya says many scientists throughout history continued to gather observations and evidence that the Earth is spherical including:
- That we see the top of a shipโs mast coming into port and not the entire ship
- That all other planets and celestial objects are spheres
- That during a lunar eclipse, the Earthโs shadow on the moon is curved
DISTRUSTING THE EXPERTS
So why, despite overwhelming scientific evidence that the Earth is an โoblate spheroidโ โ a sphere thatโs squashed at its poles and swollen at the equator โ is the flat-Earth movement gaining traction in the 21st century?
Well, in part, according to School of Culture and Communication lecturer Dr Jennifer Beckett, itโs due to a general shift towards populism and a distrust in the views of experts and the mainstream media.
โItโs really about the power of knowledge, and that increasing distrust in what we once considered to be the gatekeepers of knowledge โ like academics, scientific agencies, or the government,โ Dr Beckett says.
In this kind of environment, โit becomes really easy for once-fringe views to gain traction. You get a bunch of people around you who are constantly reaffirming your belief.โ

Dr Beckett also notes that the burgeoning movement speaks to how so-called social media โinfluencersโ can now hold more sway than an expert in the field.
โThatโs often because they tend to be better storytellers,โ Dr Beckett says.
โAnd thereโs an element of authenticity there โ people naively think, โOh, theyโre a real person, so it must be trueโ.โ
THE FLAT EARTH ECOSYSTEM
Dr Beckett notes that the flat Earth community uses various social media platforms in distinct, overlapping ways in order to create a kind of ecosystem around their beliefs.
โYoutube becomes a content hub, Facebook becomes an administrative one-stop shop for that hub, and Twitter continually pushing out the messaging,โ she says, likening Youtube to a sort of alternative documentary channel for flat earthers.
โItโs a really interesting beast โฆ they can have their daily or weekly TV show in the same way that we go to David Attenborough.โ
Itโs a more powerful social media tool than Facebook or Twitter because itโs a โhigh contextโ platform, Dr Beckett says, where users can stream themselves with an immediacy and intimacy thatโs lacking from text or image-based platforms.
โItโs kind of like feeling like you have direct access to David Attenborough, after watching one of his documentaries. Being able to have a conversation with him then have him respond in the next episode to your concerns or your question.โ

And unlike TV, on Youtube you can go searching for videos by people who agree with your view of the world. Or in this case, the Earth.
Dr Beckett says that as we increasingly rely on social media for entertainment, we are becoming โaffect addictsโ – looking for the next hit of anger, happiness or other intense emotions.
And itโs very easy for misinformation to circulate in this environment. Many flat earthers endorse the idea that the UN logo is actually a flat Earth map, for example.
But Ms Jayasuriya adds its appearance is the result of a way of โprojectingโ a 3D sphere onto a 2D plane.
Because thereโs โno perfect way to project a 3D sphere onto a 2D surfaceโ, cartographers produce maps using different โprojectionsโ for different uses. The UN logo is a particular projection centred on the North Pole.
GETTING THE FACTS FOR CRITICAL THINKING
So, the question remains: why is this a theory that still persists in 2018 in the face of science, and even photographic evidence?
Well, it also comes back to thinking critically about information thatโs out there. Particularly online.
โLook, flat earthersโ are actually employing Cartesian doubt; this a philosophical idea that the world outside the self is subject to uncertainty,โ Dr Beckett says, referring to a method of sceptical thinking popularised by Renรฉ Descartes, the French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist.

โBut, Iโd say the best way to do your research on whether a story is correct is to actually go to the mainstream media, to go to those scientific agencies and see what theyโre saying.
โAcademics are academics not because theyโre trying to pull the wool over peopleโs eyes, but because we spend a lot of time training and thinking deeply about these issues,โ says Dr Beckett.
โYou know, a lot of time, work and effort has gone into perpetuating the notion that the Earth is a globe… perhaps, thatโs a sign that it is.โ
Originally published by Pursuit, University of Melbourne, 01.11.2019, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Australia license.
