But it has an ad built in that you have to wade through or forward past.This isn't an ad, I promise haha. — flannel jesus
M&M was pre-existing evidence, yes, and everybody knew a new theory was needed because of that. Several were working on it and Einstein put out SR shortly after LET, both valid explanations. Neither dealt with gravity and neither were geometric solutions.In short, special relativity had to be derived as a consequence of Michelson Morley experiment as well as Maxwell's equations, and then General Relativity because he needed a way of keeping gravity fully local (in contrast to Newtonian gravity which involves instantaneous arrival of updated gravity information). — flannel jesus
Yes, the EP is based on that, that gravity and acceleration are locally indistinguishable, thus he could take the mathematics of accelerated frames from SR and derive things like gravitational time dilation. I think that part could have been done with the non-geometric model. Maybe. Not like I've worked through the derivations myself.Also he had this idea - that was explained in the video - about how a guy falling wouldn't feel that he is falling. The "happiest thought in his life", right?
The arena — flannel jesus
But “arena” has to be analogy — Fire Ologist
It’s not like “space” can be a “thing-in-itself” like an arena is a thing. — Fire Ologist
Relativity tells us spacetime can be stretched, — flannel jesus
Later, bending of light around large masses, and gravitational redshift were verifications, but neither of these had been done at time of GR publishing. — noAxioms
This makes it sound like A causes B to accelerate (effect), which is wrong. Both interact with each other, with neither being cause nor effect. There is no regress.So what is the difference? Well in the inertia picture we are trying to give an answer to the age old question of Aristotle's prime mover argument. At least the childish mentality of it. If something moves something then something most move. . . or change. . . that thing. . . and so on. — substantivalism
Motion under either model is an abstraction, a change in coordinate position over time, both of which are frame dependent. Thus velocity is not a physical property that gets mucked about by some other object. Contrast this with proper acceleration which is physical, and zero in gravitational inertial picture.An infinite regress results unless we somehow end it in some fashion or make some object 'self-sufficient' in its motion without anything external. The point of the concept of inertia is to postulate just this. . . that an object can move or retain its properties without having something force it to do that externally.
An object not tracing a geodesic is due to some force (EM say). So sure, using the term 'forced' seems weirdly applied, but appropriate. Calling it un-natural is deceptive.This opens the door to 'natural' states of objects and 'un-natural' states of objects. Forced and un-forced. Following geodesics and not following geodesics.
Conservation is a property of laws with certain symmetries. Newtons laws of motion exhibit that symmetry. So yes, it isn't a physical thing that 'causes' conservation. We'd probably just not have a name for energy if it wasn't useful to reference.It's like asking for the physical thing responsible for conservation of energy. . . energy is just conserved and we don't look further for the 'thing' responsible for it.
Entity-of-the-gaps can be done with any view, including the geometric one. It isn't an explanation, it's hand-waving away to the realm of magic that flies in the face of methodological naturalism, the lack of which kept science pretty much at a standstill for pretty much all of the dark ages.However, under the substantivalism picture we still desire to explain why things move the way they do and might feel at odds with bluntly just assuming the ways things move is just a law of nature not to be further explained by any other 'thing'. So we might choose to assert there is an entity who is responsible solely for grounding those familiar spatial/temporal intuitions of ours and explain why objects move the way they do.
Hands down the one without the magic entity. I didn't know where you were going with all this and was surprised when that came up.So which picture is better?
I was giving an example of something that was considered a physical law. If conservation principles don't count as truly frame independent then a simple tensor adventure could fix that and we'd find something that was respected in a frame independent manner therefore deemed significant enough to our understanding of things in nature. Even to the point of calling it a law perhaps.Remember that Newton's laws apply to inertial frames only, and don't usually work in other kinds of frames. — noAxioms
There are, however, motions which were considered 'caused' and those which were not.This makes it sound like A causes B to accelerate (effect), which is wrong. Both interact with each other, with neither being cause nor effect. There is no regress. — noAxioms
All motion is relative, end of story.Motion under either model is an abstraction, a change in coordinate position over time, both of which are frame dependent. Thus velocity is not a physical property that gets mucked about by some other object. Contrast this with proper acceleration which is physical, and zero in gravitational inertial picture. — noAxioms
No less or more than saying its following the 'contours of a curved spacetime'. Or that it 'follows the laws of physics'.An object not tracing a geodesic is due to some force (EM say). So sure, using the term 'forced' seems weirdly applied, but appropriate. Calling it un-natural is deceptive. — noAxioms
Exactly, so its irrelevant. The ontology is irrelevant.As for spacetime being a sort of aether/fabric, well, you described that pretty well, and contrast it gravity being a sort of material force rather than geomery. I don't see much difference between the views, just different ways of wording the same thing. — noAxioms
I think you misunderstand this then. . . analogies such as the 'law of inertia' or thinking of their being an entity to dictate how things should move (spacetime tells matter how to move, matter tell spacetime how to curve) serve strong heuristic purposes. Their distinct in their purposes and utility.Hands down the one without the magic entity. I didn't know where you were going with all this and was surprised when that came up. — noAxioms
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