Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal

Liste des GroupesRevenir à p relativity 
Sujet : Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal
De : python (at) *nospam* invalid.org (Python)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativity
Date : 13. Apr 2024, 12:49:29
Autres entêtes
Organisation : CCCP
Message-ID : <uvdrgb$300p4$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
Le 13/04/2024 à 08:36, Richard "Hachel" Lengrand a écrit :
Let us understand each other (a moment of optimism).
   The immense, the incomparable, the fantastic relativist theorist (that's me) wrote:
   "If two different observers travel an identical path in equal observable times,
then their proper times will necessarily be equal.
[note : I posted a more detailed answer on fr.sci.physique]
This claim is logically ill-founded to begin with :
1. From the point of view of any frame of reference the elapsed time
between ANY pair of events has a UNIQUE value. So "equal observable
times" is a void proposition.
2. "Identical path" i.e. "same set of locations" for different
trajectories is a condition that can be verified in a given
frame of reference but, then won't be so in other frames.
A condition that depends on a choice of frame of reference (subjective)
CANNOT implies a conclusion that does not depend on it ("objective")
(except in Galilean Relativity, of course, but then all times, proper
or not are equal, but everything implies an always true proposition,
and this is not what Lengrand claims)
So Lengrand's claim is dead in the water at first read.

  Let's set up a Galilean frame of reference, in which a Galilean mobile moves from left to right on the x axis.
...
  Let us pose another body, but this time in uniformly accelerated motion, and whose speed will be specially chosen so that To=12.915.
   This means that in R, if they leave together, they arrive together (even if they do not have the same speed between them).
...
  Their own times will be equal.
This is obviously violating the principle of Relativity. It is obvious
when you describe the situation in the inertial traveler's frame of
reference. (except, again, in Galilean Relativiy)

  It's even a very speech full of abstract religiosity.
If you call religiosity the fact that you are psychologically unable
to consider anything that went through your mind, without any sensible
justification, as wrong, this is, indeed, religiosity. This is more
correctly called "hubris".

Date Sujet#  Auteur
13 Apr 24 * [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal36Richard Hachel
13 Apr 24 +* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal6Python
13 Apr 24 i`* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal5Maciej Wozniak
13 Apr 24 i `* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal4Python
13 Apr 24 i  `* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal3Maciej Wozniak
13 Apr 24 i   `* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal2Python
14 Apr 24 i    `- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Python
13 Apr 24 +- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Osman Agelakos
13 Apr 24 +* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal5gharnagel
13 Apr 24 i+* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal3Maciej Wozniak
13 Apr 24 ii`* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal2gharnagel
14 Apr 24 ii `- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Cherles Hoffmann
14 Apr 24 i`- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Leolin Vilinbahov
20 Apr 24 `* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal23Tom Roberts
20 Apr 24  +* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal9Python
21 Apr 24  i`* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal8Richard Hachel
21 Apr 24  i +* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal5Python
21 Apr 24  i i`* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal4Richard Hachel
21 Apr 24  i i `* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal3Python
22 Apr 24  i i  `* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal2Richard Hachel
22 Apr 24  i i   `- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Python
21 Apr 24  i `* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal2Python
21 Apr 24  i  `- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Richard Hachel
20 Apr 24  +- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Maciej Wozniak
20 Apr 24  +- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1German Dorotea
21 Apr 24  +* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal3Richard Hachel
21 Apr 24  i`* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal2Athel Cornish-Bowden
21 Apr 24  i `- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Zhunda Mochalov
21 Apr 24  `* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal8Ross Finlayson
21 Apr 24   +* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal6Python
21 Apr 24   i+- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Kory Kato
21 Apr 24   i`* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal4Richard Hachel
21 Apr 24   i `* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal3Python
21 Apr 24   i  `* Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal2Richard Hachel
21 Apr 24   i   `- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Python
21 Apr 24   `- Re: [SR] Their proper times will necessarily be equal1Tai Loong

Haut de la page

Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.

NewsPortal