This leads to the interpretation that any restful body is not actually at rest but is moving through time at the speed of light. So in that sense everything moves through spacetime at velocity c, but photons can only move through space, hence no time passes for a photon. — Kenosha Kid
Can you clarify what "movement" means here? Certainly can't mean change in spatial location with respect to time since we are talking about "motion" through time. Of course one can define it in terms of a fifth dimension which objects move with respect to, but there are none beyond those of spacetime that I am aware. It seems like you're using it in a different sense than is normally used. — Mr Bee
Thanks, though from looking at the opinions of other physicists on the matter these past few hours, it doesn't seem like the whole concept of "speed through spacetime" is a popular way of describing things, with alot of people blaming Brian Greene for the concept. — Mr Bee
Scientists have to accept that Einsten was at best a cool dude, but not a god, and he was simply wrong. — Eugen
There are many ways in which you could reach the same result. — Eugen
I am not a sciebtist, but I have seen different plausible variants. You can check on YT. But even if we didn't have alternatives, I don't think believing in absurd things like time curvature is a good way to do science. Time is like probabilities - just a human tool. — Eugen
GR is based on the idealistic thought that the universe revolves around the observer. — Eugen
GR is so illogic. E.g. if you live on Mars and work in London, if you wanna travel by the speed of light (in order to arrive earlier) you have to leave home earlier, which is contrary to all daily empirical tests. So this is an empirical counter-argument. GR is false! — Eugen
This is SR. If you wish to travel for 5 minutes to get to Mars for 9 am, you have to leave before 8:55 Martian time because of time dilation. Moving clocks run slow, as has been demonstrated by the velocity-dependence of particle decays. — Kenosha Kid
I am sure it is a case where many mistakes bring you to the correct answer. It is simply illogic and against common sense and reality cannot be like this. — Eugen
It is an exceedingly simple theory, derived exactly from two postulates:
1. The empirically-verified observer-independence of the speed of light;
2. The empirically-verified invariability of physical law to inertial motion.
Without finding a flaw in its postulates or its derivation, it is illogical to dismiss its conclusions. — Kenosha Kid
Pilot wave has no empirical flaws and it contradicts both GR and probabilistic QM. — Eugen
Pilot wave has no empirical flaws and it contradicts both GR and probabilistic QM. — Eugen
It did. And of course a thing cannot be in 2 places at once and it doesn't "care" about being observed or not. — Eugen
These are technicalities and I cannot get into them because it is not my field, but I can only say I did a research and I haven't found flaws with pilot wave. I did find many with GR though. My point is that there are many different opinions, but at the end of the day common-sense and logic will prevail. GR or probabilistic QM are very against common-sense and logic. — Eugen
But common sense has nothing to do with it. — Kenosha Kid
We are evolved to model everyday, — Kenosha Kid
Imagine if you were a snail. At the speed of an elderly woman walking down Main Street with a cane, the same is true. In a way. Yes? — Outlander
I'm at home and my clock seems to me to run at a certain rate. My twin on the spaceship describes exactly the same phenomenon. But on his return I'm sixty years older, and he twenty. — tim wood
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