Unlikely, I'd say.1. Am I correct about what I said about Newton? Had his measurements for mass and distance been more precise (had more decimal places) than what was available to him, he would've realized that the formula was wrong. — TheMadFool
Did you not like my eariler explanation?2. Why can't the output of a formula not be more precise than the input? — TheMadFool
The general proof again needs statistical methods, no doubt. For the specific case of a multiplication like F = ma, though, just think of the inputs as the length and width of a rectangle, and the output as its area. If the length is known perfectly, and the width has an uncertainty of 10%, say, then the area will have an uncertainty of 10% as well. Vice versa, if the length has the 10% uncertainty, and the width is known perfectly, same result. So when both the length and the width have a 10% uncertainty, it should be clear that the area now has an uncertainty of more than 10%. — onomatomanic
Part of the problem may be that you're thinking in terms of individual measurements. Think in terms of datasets instead:What is of concern to me is why an entirely new model needs to be built from scratch simply to explain a more precise measurement if that is what's actually going on? — TheMadFool
Agreed, but with reservations. We can "parametrise" the speed summation equation like this in general:The difference between Newton and Einstein, their theories to be "precise", manifests as differences in the precision of the outputs of the respective formulae of Newtonian velocity addition and relativistic velocity addition. — TheMadFool
Precisely. In F = m*a, the imprecision in F is the combined imprecision in m and a, both of which need to be measured. In v = gamma * (v1+v2), the imprecision in v is the combined imprecision from taking gamma to be a constant and from the straight summation of v1 and v2, which again need to be measured. The only way not to "miss it completely" is for the parametric contribution to be the dominant one, which in practice means either Relativistically high speeds, or high precision in measuring those speeds, or ideally both.You'd miss it completely if you maintain that significant digits preclude higher precision in the output than in the inputs. — TheMadFool
The speedometer is both accurate and precise. — TheMadFool
In the real world, there's no point in supposing such a thing, because the only way we can find out is to meaure it. In a thought experiment, there may be a point - but thought experiments can't confirm theories, only falsifySuppose the actual velocity is [...] — TheMadFool
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