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Are those really theories, or interpretations of how we perceive (or may be perceiving) things?
Can time really be a dimension in all those theories? It certainly doesn't behave like the spatial dimensions
But the big questions to me are:How does time work?Why does it work that way?What is the logic of time in those views?
Quote from: TyroJack on 11/06/2019 14:44:30Can time really be a dimension in all those theories? It certainly doesn't behave like the spatial dimensionsIt isn't a spatial dimension, even if it is very much orthogonal and can be measured in meters and such. It is a temporal dimension, and yes, it behaves different, but like the three axes in a model of space, the orientation of all four spacetime axes is pretty arbitrary so long as they remain orthogonal.
Yes, I understand it isn't a spatial dimension. I wonder why, if it behaves differently - has different properties from spatial dimensions - why it is included as a fourth orthogonal dimension? Why orthogonal?I find it difficult to see the justification for that as time has no orientation with respect to space.
I wonder if it could be presented as a different sort of additional dimension on a Cartesian, three dimensional, space diagram?
As I said, time has no spatial orientation; time only moves in one direction; time can be measured from any starting point in space.
Any point in space could then have...
Quote from: TyroJack on 11/06/2019 18:09:04Any point in space could then have... Points in space are defined with only 3 of the 4 dimensions, so they define a straight line (parallel to the t axis) in 4D spacetime, not a point.
What I mean is: shouldn't time dilation be a natural result of the movement of a clock in spacetime? Without any need for Lorentz transformation equations or the Lorentz factor.We are only dealing with distances times and directions, all components of classical mechanics the only extra is the constant speed of light...
The Lorentz transformations follow from the premise of constant light speed. In the universe with a different (more simple) motion description (say with fixed rather than arbitrary temporal axis orientation), time would flow at an objective rate and light would be measured at different speeds by moving observers.. This was empirically falsified.
The Lorentz transformation equations do follow from the premise of constant light speed, but I am thinking that we should be able to reach the same conclusions from the mechanics of spacetime. ....What I am saying is that built upon such straightforward entities as space and time, why can we not see the mechaics of it?
Relativity: The Special and General Theory.
......He added but two postulates: the principle of relativity and the invariance of the speed of light.He goes on to build his insight into his theories based on these principles.Can we not derive the same outcomes from classical mechanics by complying with rules of Newtonian mechanics as we know them with the addition of these postulates?