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Quote from: Space FlowIf you are making the claim that this is not what GR claims as the cause of Gravity I wish you would present your source of information when you make such a statement. This one probably comes closest to what I said. I'm pushed for time at the moment, but I think I could find a few more ewxamples if you need them http://www.quantum-field-theory.net/einstein-didnt-say/
If you are making the claim that this is not what GR claims as the cause of Gravity I wish you would present your source of information when you make such a statement.
Equations of motion do not describe a curved path in the absence of a force.
This one probably comes closest to what I said. I'm pushed for time at the moment, but I think I could find a few more ewxamples if you need them http://www.quantum-field-theory.net/einstein-didnt-say/
When working on a comprehensive paper on the special theory of relativity… there occurred to me the happiest thought of my life…. for an observer falling freely from the roof of a house there exists – at least in his immediate surroundings – no gravitational field (Einstein’s emphasis). Indeed, if the observer drops some bodies then these remain relative to him in a state of rest or of uniform motion, independent of their particular nature… This simple thought made a deep impression on me. It impelled me toward a theory of gravitation. – A. Einstein (P1982, p. 178-179)
Quote from: Jeffrey Equations of motion do not describe a curved path in the absence of a force.Would that force be gravity?
.....that is certainly not the accepted by majority view of classical GR physics as I understand it today.