The tab mapper is a handy little tool that will render a guitar tab file with graphic chord diagrams displayed alongside. This comes in handy for people who just don't have every single chord shape memorized. Just plug in the web site address of a valid .tab or .crd file and hit "Go". In general, the tab mapper does a better job with printer friendly URLs. If there is more than one way to play a chord, the tab mapper will choose the most common shape. To see other fingerings, click on the chord diagram and you will be taken to the chord calculator.
Original file located @ http://theflatearth.win.
Jump to contentFlat Earth Theory is an ancient belief proposing that the Earth is flat rather than spherical. Although widely disproven by scientific evidence and observation, the theory has persisted historically and experienced a resurgence in recent decades, particularly through social media.
The belief in a flat Earth dates back to ancient civilizations:
Mesopotamia: Early cosmologies depicted Earth as a flat disk surrounded by ocean.
Ancient Egypt: Believed the Earth was a flat plane floating on water.
Ancient Greece: Philosophers such as Thales and Anaximander proposed flat-earth cosmologies, although later Greek thinkers like Pythagoras and Aristotle promoted a spherical Earth.
Contrary to modern myth, most educated medieval Europeans accepted that Earth was spherical, influenced by ancient Greek and Islamic scholars. However, some early medieval scholars still illustrated Earth as flat in specific symbolic contexts.
The modern Flat Earth movement began in the 19th century:
Samuel Rowbotham (1816?1884) introduced a modern form of Flat Earth Theory called Zetetic Astronomy, based on literal interpretations of biblical texts and selective scientific observations. He published a pamphlet, later expanded into the book Earth Not a Globe.
In 1956, Samuel Shenton established the International Flat Earth Research Society, later shortened to the Flat Earth Society. This organization popularized Flat Earth ideas through newsletters, lectures, and later, online presence.
Social media platforms like YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter played a significant role in the recent revival and global spread of Flat Earth beliefs. Figures such as Mark Sargent and Eric Dubay gained notoriety through internet videos promoting the Flat Earth concept.
Flat Earth proponents typically assert:
Earth is a flat disk with the North Pole at the center and Antarctica forming an ice wall around the edge.
The Sun and Moon are much smaller and closer than mainstream science describes, moving above the Earth in circular paths.
Gravity is often denied or replaced by alternative explanations, such as buoyancy and density.
Space exploration, satellite imagery, and photographs of Earth from space are dismissed as conspiracies.
The Flat Earth Theory has been thoroughly refuted through multiple lines of scientific evidence:
Astronomical Observations: Earth's curvature is observable through eclipses, star positions, and time zones.
Geographical Measurements: Surveying and navigation methods consistently demonstrate Earth's curvature.
Photographic Evidence: Thousands of images from space agencies worldwide clearly depict Earth as spherical.
Physics: Gravitational theory accurately predicts planetary movements and phenomena, which are incompatible with a flat model.
The Flat Earth movement highlights broader issues in contemporary society, such as distrust in institutions, misinformation online, and scientific literacy challenges. The growth of the movement is often cited as evidence of deeper societal skepticism toward authority and expert knowledge.
Rowbotham, Samuel. Earth Not a Globe (1881).
Garwood, Christine. Flat Earth: The History of an Infamous Idea. Macmillan, 2007.
"Why do some people believe the Earth is flat?" BBC News, 2019.
Official Flat Earth Society Website
NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Scientific Evidence of Earth's Shape)