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| Tags: absolutely, clocks, synchronise |
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#82
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On 16 Sep 2003 23:38:18 -0700, (Mark Szlazak) wrote:
(HenriWilson) wrote in message . .. What you don't understand is that OWLS has never been measured. There is no evidence at all that it is universally constant. TWLS has been measured many times and found to be apparently constant only to within about 1 part in about 10^9 which tells us nothing since the term (v/c)^2 is the expected order of the difference between OWLS and TWLS. Relativity describes the geometry of space as it would have to appear if OWLS was truly constant and equal to TWLS. What you say about OWLS doesn't matter that much anyway. The status of simultaneity to an inertial frame (i.e, convention of simultaneity which is different from the relativity of simultaneity) didn't seem to matter much to Einstein in his 1905 paper. I got the following from Adolf Grunbaum's online paper, "David Malament and the Convention of Simultaneity: A Reply" Section 1, entitled "Definition Of Simultaneity", he uses the German word "Festsetzung" which can be translated as "stipulation," when he tells us of the need for a "Festsetzung" to make temporal comparisons at spatially separated points. This "Festsetzung" comes into play, he says, when we endeavor to define a "time" that is "common" to space points A and B. The latter time, he explains, can now be "defined," "indem man durch Definition festsetzt" i.e., "by stipulation be means of a definition," that the one-way transit times of a reflected light ray in opposite directions of the path are equal. This is his optical specification of the familiar standard synchrony of clocks. Thus, events at A and B that are assigned equal time coordinates by this stipulation are metrically simultaneous on the strength of it. In 1954 (originally 1916), Einstein made it even more explicit that he contrasts a "stipulation" with a "supposition" or a "hypothesis" such that there is no fact to the matter whether two events are simultaneous relative to a particular inertial observer. There he considers two points A and B at a railway embankment, and the line segment between them whose mid-point is M. An observer at M can observe the joint arrival at M of light flashes originating at A and B, respectively. As to whether the two flashes originate simultaneously on the embankment, Einstein writes: " ... That light requires the same time to traverse the path A-M as for path B-M is in reality neither a supposition nor a hypothesis about the physical nature of light, but a stipulation which I can make of my own freewill in order to arrive at a definition of simultaneity." Graunbaum defends the conventionalist view of simultaneity within a frame against Malament's famous 1977 paper "Causal Theories of Time and the Conventionality of Simultaneity" (Nous 11: 293-300) which argues that choosing the one-way trip time as half the round-trip time is not trivially conventional. Reichenbach also takes the conventioanlist view and instead of using the standard half, he uses the variable epsilon in which is 0 epsilon 1. John Winnie (1977) derives the "epsilon-Lorentz transformations" which leave epsilon as an unspecified variable, his work is based on such earlier axiomatizations due to Alfred Robb (1914, 1921). The Stanford University Encyclopedia Of Philosophy has this entry on the Conventinality of Simultaneity. http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/sp...e-convensimul/ It's also discussed in Chapter 5 "Philosophy Of Space And Time" by John Norton in the book "Intoduction To The Philosophy Of Science" by Salmon, et. al. A few more links: http://www.bun.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~suchii/janis.html http://users.ox.ac.uk/~jrlucas/time/transten.html I'm more convinced by non-conventionalists like Malament and Lucas than by the conventionalists like Grunbaum and Reichenbach. Conventionalist arguments all seem to be catagory mistakes, misdirections or specious. In either case, Henri, there is no problem here. Except maybe thinking there was one? Hmm? I think there is a BIG problem. Using Einstein's definition of clock synch gives a completely wrong interpretation of the physical geometry of the universe. My method eliminates all the misconceptions flowing from our use of EM to communicate. My clocks define an absolute instant in two locations. A measurements of OWLS using clocks synched my way will be different from one using Einstein's method. Mine will be correct. OWLS MUST be constant using E-synching. Henri Wilson. See my animations at: http://www.users.bigpond.com/HeWn/index.htm My latest: http://www.users.bigpond.com/HeWn/movingrod.exe |
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