Quote:
Originally Posted by Michael Mooney
Thank you.
Still, one must ask why clocks slow down and speed up at different velocities
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Yes one must ask that, and the epistemological analysis that I am talking about exposes quite interesting (and quite mundane) information about that.
But whenever I refer to relationships that we have defined in our minds as part of our model of reality, you take that as idealism. I don't think it makes sense for me to use my time trying to explain it to you.
Just as a general commentary on the topic of this thread, I just went to the barber shop this morning, and read this finnish science magazine for a bit. It's quite respected as a mainstream science magazine, but really their physics articles are just embarrassing at best.
I've complained before that the mainstream publications are quite sensationalistic in their physics articles. I guess it makes sense; wild claims about reality are more interesting than dry and complicated expressions of intuitive relationships. And when you can dress those claims as "science" on the basis that some model can be interpreted that way, you have the material for an "scientists are saying that [add whatever wild claim your heart desires]"-article.
The net effect of that is that the crazy interpretations get waaaaay more attention than they deserve, and become sort of established as the public facades of the theories (Like Minkowski spacetime).
This time it was an article titled "Time does not exist". They gave the impression that this is some sort of "new finding" that physicists have just recently found out; "scientists have found that time may not exists, but instead the past and the future exists all the time". They went on to say that "Einstein's theory of relativity says that time does not exist", so while they implied this was new development, they were actually referring to what Minkowski wrote in his paper at, oh let's see, 1908. I'm not very good at math, but I think that's over 100 years ago. Not exactly "recent", and not exactly "a finding".
And of course they had an "expert physicist" of some sort that was commenting on the issue, talking about how time is seen as static in relativity, and the writer of the article went on to even criticize the physicist saying
"why aren't the physicists making more ruckus about this thing, I think people would find it comforting that their childhood still exists?". (see what I meant about "embarrassing at best")
At least that physicist added a very last one-sentence disclaimer in the end, saying "...but this is just a mathematical model and we should not draw too far reaching conclusions about it". Unfortunately, I think that comment gets very much buried under the sensationalist tone of the rest of the article.
What is sort of comforting underneath all that stupidity is that the article was part of some series called "Wild Claims". What makes that aspect immediately sad again is that the same magazine, like all the others, routinely refers to aspects of relativity that only exist in the "static spacetime" interpretation of relativity, without realizing it at all. I don't think the writer of that article realized for a second that they were talking about the same standard interpretation of relativity that they always talk about anyway. You know the feeling you get when someone is just so far behind the curve that there doesn't seem to be any way to even explain the issues to them.... ...and then that person writes articles to a science magazine... I would have a joke about that, but it makes me too angry
-Anssi