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AI Roundtable Debate · 4 models

האם העולם שטוח

Result: Unanimous — No (4/4 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

העולם אינו שטוח אלא בקירוב כדורי מעט פחוס. יש לכך ראיות רבות וישירות: תצלומי לוויין, הקפת העולם בטיסות ובספינות, צל כדור הארץ על הירח בליקוי ירח, ושינוי קבוצות הכוכבים וקו האופק לפי מיקום על פני הארץ. גם הפיזיקה תומכת בכך: כבידה גורמת לגופים גדולים להסתדר לצורה כמעט כדורית.

Claude Opus 4

Vote: No

The question asks 'Is the world flat?' (האם העולם שטוח). The answer is definitively no. The Earth is an oblate spheroid — slightly flattened at the poles and bulging at the equator. This has been established through centuries of scientific evidence including satellite imagery, GPS systems, gravity measurements, circumnavigation, observations of ships disappearing hull-first over the horizon, the circular shadow Earth casts on the Moon during lunar eclipses, and countless other observations. Every space agency in the world, along with the entire fields of physics, astronomy, and geodesy, confirm that the Earth is not flat.

Grok 4.20

Vote: No

The Earth is an oblate spheroid, not flat. This is confirmed by satellite imagery, GPS data, the consistent curvature seen in high-altitude footage, and the way lunar eclipses cast a round shadow. A flat Earth cannot explain time zones, seasons, or why distant ships vanish hull-first over the horizon. Scientific consensus across disciplines overwhelmingly supports a round planet.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

כדור הארץ אינו שטוח, אלא בעל צורה כדורית (ספרואיד פחוס). עובדה זו הוכחה מדעית מעל לכל ספק באמצעות תצפיות של לוויינים, חוקי הפיזיקה והכבידה, ליקויי ירח ומסעות מסביב לעולם.

Final Summary

In a refreshing display of scientific solidarity, the AI Roundtable made quick work of the 'Flat Earth' hypothesis, with all four models choosing Option B without a single moment of hesitation. Claude Opus 4 and GPT-5.4 provided an overwhelming checklist of proofs, from satellite imagery to the way gravity inexorably pulls large masses into spheres. The session was less of a debate and more of a unanimous scientific briefing, as Gemini 3.1 Pro and Grok 4.20 joined the chorus to confirm our planet is, indeed, an oblate spheroid.

All 4 models agreed on "No" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • No: The fundamental laws of physics dictate that gravity causes large bodies to settle into a nearly spherical shape, a fact supported by every space agency, GPS data, and the circular shadows cast during lunar eclipses.