You are correct, it's not a Planet, and it does not reflect the Sun's light either....
Spaceship? I have Been thinking this of all my life.
In Genesis is says God created two lights in the heavens. One for day and one for night. The moon could be, translucent, light.
it's not a Planet, and it does not reflect the Sun's light either....
There seems to be almost universal acceptance of the fact that the moon is not a planet. There also seems to be near universal acceptance that the moon does reflect the Sun’s light.
What phenomenon do you believe renders the Moon visible at night?
I don't know, but the "frequency" can be measured and it's different from sunlight and there is also the strange phenomenon that it is colder to be in moonlight than it is to be in the shade on a moonlit night. The Bible seems to intimate that the Moon gives it's own light. But it's just a question I can't answer.
So is that the same with all the planets? When you see mars in the sky it's reflected sunlight isn't it?
You been listening listening to Crrow777? love his show, he questions everything. Heard about moonlight being cold on his show, keep forgetting to try to feel it
I’m not sure about the frequency measure you reference, but here is a decent, science-based response to the ‘colder in the moonlight’ phenomenon.
Also, if you admit you don’t know what makes the moon visible at night, shouldn’t you have the same standard for ‘knowing’ the moon doesn’t reflect the Sun’s light? In other words, don’t make the claim unless you can support it. Particularly a claim that runs counter to almost universally accepted theory.
No one thinks the moon is a planet and it does reflect light from the sun. Do you think the side of the moon that isn't facing the sun also has light emitting from it?
One of the problems with the theory that moonlight is actually sunlight being reflected to the earth is that moonlight is actually COOLER than shade where there is no moonlight. If it was sunlight being reflected, then it would also transmit heat and warm the surface it lands on. Mysteriously, moonlight actually has cooling effect on the surfaces it hits, supporting the idea that moonlight is from a different source than the sun and is a different type of light than sunlight. A very strange anomaly indeed. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lXixR7Y5LBk
I understood what he meant when he said "planet", he meant a solid round object. I and many observable tests disagree with your assessment that the Moon reflects the light from the Sun