Motion by definition is relative. — noAxioms
I have a hard time thinking in such terms, as I said, you should go with it. — noAxioms
In absolute interpretation, light speed is not frame independent. That's where it becomes complicated. Has nothing to do with apples. — noAxioms
With the apples I can open the fridge and set the two side by side and it is clear which one is more decayed.It has everything to do with apples - I brought apples into it and wanted to know why those who think the twin paradox shows us something interesting about time aren't as confused as someone who thinks that because an apple in the fridge decays more slowly than one on the sideboard, therefore time travels more slowly in the fridge.
So far you have singularly failed to do this - indeed, from your previous comment it seems that you think time does actually travel slower in the fridge.
If you don't think this, can you explain the difference between my apple example and the twin paradox? — Bartricks
The differences between the two interpretations of relativity (relative or absolute frames) and the differences between two interpretations of time (block 4D spacetime vs presentist 3D space) are a matter of belief, yes. The fact that the one twin will be twice the age of the other when they meet again is not a matter of belief.So this is not a point about reality, or time, but about justified beliefs, yes? — Bartricks
But you can. Simple geometry. I can measure the actual size of something without being in its presence, if I know how far away it is.When my twin travels away from me, it seems to me that he is getting smaller and smaller than me. And from his perspective, as he travels away from me, I seem to be getting smaller and smaller than him.
Now, what do we conclude? That we are both getting smaller than each other? No, that's clearly impossible. And it remains impossible even if, due to the fact we've both travelling away from each other, we'll never meet to be able to compare body sizes.
Only if you believe both are true at once. They can't both be right if they're mutually contradictory. Maybe everybody's wrong.Two people can be equally justified in holding contradictory beliefs - there's no problem with that. What is problematic is holding that something contradictory is actually true.
Nobody I know claims this. I certainly don't. OK, trolls claim this I suppose.Two people cannot both be older than each other. Two people cannot both be smaller than each other. But two people most certainly can believe that they are older than each other, and be equally justified in that belief
It seems if there are three valid contradictory positions, then nobody can be justified in their belief using any empirical evidence since they're not justified in eliminating the other possibilities. All of philosophy seems to be like that. If you could verify/falsify one position over the other, it would be justifiable scientific fact, not an interpretational choice.Two people can be equally justified in believing contradictory propositions - and there can be nothing we can do to confirm which belief, if either, is true. — Bartricks
You seem to not understand either interpretation then. Neither requires the other to be true.But you can't conclude from that that both are true. Yet that seems exactly what you would need to do to derive any substantial conclusion about time from the twins paradox.
We're all ignorant; it is the condition of us all, until we should know better. If we're then still ignorant, the proper term is stupid. Relativity is well-observed, well-established fact. Any problem you have with it is your own - not so terrible because while relativity in broad strokes is not too difficult, it can be both tricky and difficult in the details. But any claims at all about relativity being wrong or a matter of opinion is really just a declaration of personal stupidity. Insistence in any of these claims just an insistence on being stupid.is that two people can acquire equally justified contradictory beliefs about something. — Bartricks
When my twin travels away from me, it seems to me that he is getting smaller and smaller than me. And from his perspective, as he travels away from me, I seem to be getting smaller and smaller than him.
Now, what do we conclude? That we are both getting smaller than each other? No, that's clearly impossible. And it remains impossible even if, due to the fact we've both travelling away from each other, we'll never meet to be able to compare body sizes.
We are not both getting smaller than each other - because that's impossible as a moment's reflection reveals - and that remains true even if, due to our impressions of what's happening, we're both equally justified in believing that we are getting smaller than each other.
Two people can be equally justified in holding contradictory beliefs - there's no problem with that. What is problematic is holding that something contradictory is actually true.
Two people cannot both be older than each other. Two people cannot both be smaller than each other. But two people most certainly can believe that they are older than each other, and be equally justified in that belief; and two people can be equally justified in believing that they are smaller than the other. — Bartricks
Hahaha, so you DO think time goes more slowly in fridges?! It has been demonstrated conclusively that apples decay more slowly in fridges.
The apple in the fridge on the sideboard does not 'age' faster than the one in the fridge. They are both the same age. One is just more shrivelled than the other. Processes have happened in one faster than they have in the other. — Bartricks
the muon is not believed to have any sub-structure—that is, it is not thought to be composed of any simpler particles
the muon decays to an electron, an electron antineutrino, and a muon neutrino
You either know what you mean and can make it clear, or you don't and cannot. I think you don't, but I'll retract when you make it clear. What do you mean by "relativity of time"? Are you referring to an idea of time? Proper time interval? An abstract "essence" of time? Something else?You don't get it - the twin paradox in no way implies the relativity of time. — Bartricks
Would like to get your responses to my responses to you from those other posts yesterday..... — Edgar L Owen
In this case, he seems to be talking about the absolute/preferred frame interpretation (Lorentz and such) vs the mainstream interpretation that says the speed of light is actually the same in any frame, and doesn't just appear that way.You don't get it - the twin paradox in no way implies the relativity of time.
— Bartricks
You either know what you mean and can make it clear, or you don't and cannot. — tim wood
The absolutists tend to be militantly biased, and Bartricks and Leo fit right in with that crowd. They even hold conventions for them to help separate them from their money. — noAxioms
If the two interpretations make the same predictions, why was the Michelson-Morley experiment performed? Its results seems to be a falsification of what those two predicted as an empirical test for the absolute interpretation. — noAxioms
All said, most absolutists correctly do not posit an inertial frame as the preferred one — noAxioms
and hence you get strange effects like any moving object, in the absence of a force acting on it, will tend to slow down over time. — noAxioms
All right, relativity is a lie. Now how about you make that case right here, right now.When people are told the lies that relativity is true, — leo
Thank you for illustrating my point.The absolutists tend to be militantly biased
— noAxioms
I fight for truth, you got a problem with that?
When people are told the lies that relativity is true, that they have to give up many of the intuitive ideas they’ve had all their life, that they have to replace them with totally unintuitive ideas because supposedly that’s how the universe really works, when as a result they give up trying to understand the universe or end up blindly believing the authority, when people who have an inquiring mind explore alternatives to relativity and get labeled derogatory names (“crackpot”, “absolutist”) simply because they have a scientific mind and they use it, when they get told more lies (“relativity proves there is no absolute frame”, “the concept of the aether was falsified experimentally”, “light is measured to travel at c in all inertial frames”), I think it’s a disgrace.
When the normality is to spew lies and when one gets attacked or scorned for correcting these lies and fighting for truth, it’s a disgrace. If you don’t see the problem with that attitude and the attitude you’re having now, that’s a problem too. This is the attitude that makes science dogmatic and stagnate. — leo
I use the two terms interchangeably. The preferred frame and the absolute one refer to the same thing.All said, most absolutists correctly do not posit an inertial frame as the preferred one
— noAxioms
If there is an absolute frame then by definition there is a preferred frame, even if it may not be detected, again what are you talking about?
Yes, that's the obvious one. It isn't inertial, and has the problems/properties listed in my prior post.Also as I mentioned earlier, the cosmic microwave background radiation does select a preferred frame.
Do you agree that the inertial frame in which the CMB aopears isotropic from here is a different inertial frame that the one where the CMB appears isotropic from a galaxy say 8 billion light years away? Not sure how far short your understanding is, so not sure where to start.and hence you get strange effects like any moving object, in the absence of a force acting on it, will tend to slow down over time.
— noAxioms
I wonder where you got that, tell me more and I’ll debunk it for you.
Illustrating an apparent complete lack of understanding of the mainstream interpretation. Anyway, I called nothing 'strange' and don't deny the validity of most absolute interpretations, but I pointed out some conservation problems with it that need resolution.Also I like how you don’t bat an eye when you attempt to explain in a convoluted way why the twins are really both aging more slowly than the other, or why light really travels at c in all directions in all inertial frames, if you were consistent you would call THAT a strange effect.
I would never have suggested time running more slowly in a muon's own frame. That's wrong in both interpretations.And if you were consistent you would admit that muons decaying more slowly doesn’t imply that time runs more slowly in their frame
Thank you for illustrating my point. — noAxioms
Do you agree that the inertial frame in which the CMB aopears isotropic from here is a different inertial frame that the one where the CMB appears isotropic from a galaxy say 8 billion light years away? — noAxioms
Anyway, I called nothing 'strange' — noAxioms
you get strange effects — noAxioms
I would never have suggested time running more slowly in a muon's own frame. — noAxioms
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.