The idea of a rotating Earth was the biggest hurdle for the non-geocentric ideas to overcome. If the Earth were rotating, wouldn't we notice it? Riding a horse is a motion which one cannot help but notice. And a rotating Earth would be much more violent, at 465 meters per second, as was estimated already in ancient times. Ten times a hurricane. That is obviously not the case. I can stand up on the ground without falling over, but I can't stand up on a galloping horse's back, people argued quite reasonably.
It requires careful cleverness to apply our gardening-evolved intuition to the reality beyond the fence. I personally find the Oberth effect to be unintuitive, that in empty space a push gives more acceleration to a fast object than to a slow one. With friction from roads, rails and air the opposite is true in our everyday life.
The resolution (certainly with ancient predecessors if documents are preserved) is called Gallileo's ship.
myth
pertains to the belief during the middle ages, not before.Many ancient cultures have had conceptions of a flat Earth, including Greece until the classical period ... most Pre-Socratics retained the flat Earth model.
The flat earth belief started to be replaced after 330BC. From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_Earth – LDC3 Feb 01 '15 at 15:46