One school of thought is that he says that she is ageing more slowly than he is, on both the outbound leg and on the inbound leg, — Mike Fontenot
Special relativity says that, for two perpetually-inertial observers (meaning that they have never accelerated, and never will accelerate), they EACH will conclude that the other is ageing more slowly. (I believe that all physicists believe that). — Mike Fontenot
For circular motion by the traveler, the two twins Do agree with one another. — Mike Fontenot
non-zero speed — Mike Fontenot
perpetually inertial — Mike Fontenot
I am not sure I understand the problem. Is it that situations can arise in which one person, Jill, has apparent evidence that James has aged more slowly than she, and James will have apparent evidence that Jill has aged more slowly than he?
If so, that as it stands is not really a problem as such, for we can simply say that one of them is mistaken. They may both be equally justified in their beliefs, nevertheless, one of them is incorrect. — Bartricks
I wonder if anything could be deduced by a constant, mutual, radio broadcast of each other's heartbeats to each other. That would allow verification of the existence of the other twin and also act as sort of body clock by which they might be able to judge each others relative speeds of ageing.
Maybe even quantum entanglement could be used to transmit, instantaneously this time, the beat of each other's hearts. — Devans99
Your first paragraph doesn't work, because the distance between them is constantly changing, and so the actual period of the heartbeats is distorted by the varying travel times of the messages — Mike Fontenot
Your second paragraph doesn't work, because special relativity and quantum mechanics are mutually inconsistent ... neither theory recognizes the legitimacy of the other. — Mike Fontenot
I want to know what you and other philosophers think of my intuitive philosophical reasoning about the question of whether simultaneity at a distance is meaningful or meaningless. — Mike Fontenot
I would agree that her heartbeats continually in his absence, so she must always have a well defined biological age. — Devans99
The famous twin paradox of special relativity involves a scenario where one twin (he) rockets away from the home twin (her), coasts to a far-away turnpoint, reverses course, coasts back, and comes to a halt when they are reunited. At the reunion, both twins agree (by inspection) that she is older than he is. — Mike Fontenot
BUT many physicists DO believe that she doesn't have a well-defined current AGE when he is separated from her (at least if he has accelerated recently). THAT'S the conclusion that I can't accept philosophically: it seems to me that if she currently EXISTS right now, she must be DOING something right now, and if she is DOING something right now, she must be some specific AGE right now. So I conclude that her current age, according to him, can't be a meaningless concept. — Mike Fontenot
This seems to conflict with this subsequent statement:But physicists DO differ about what HE concludes about HER current age DURING his trip. — Mike Fontenot
OK, maybe not, since both are wrong.Special relativity says that, for two perpetually-inertial observers (meaning that they have never accelerated, and never will accelerate), they EACH will conclude that the other is ageing more slowly. — Mike Fontenot
That was an example of a statement without a frame specification, and thus wrong. In either frame in which one person is stationary, the other ages more slowly."For the traveler traveling away or the observer staying behind their is no difference in their relative speed so they age at the same rate." — Mike Fontenot
There are no contradictory positions in this scenario. Both parties agree on all facts at all times. Confusion only arises when the frame references are omitted.If two people have equally good evidence for contradictory positions, it does not follow that they are both correct. — Bartricks
Gravity is not part of special relativity. That said, under GR, on Earth you are accelerating upward, not downward, else the water in your cup would stay in only if inverted. The force on me from my chair pushes me up, not down.You are not inertial, you are accelerating towards the centre of the Earth. — A Seagull
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