0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
A few of the papers, for the last time Geezer, explain that moving clocks cease to exist - that is quantum clocks, objects moving relative to other things.
Rats! I thought you were serious about the "last time".No, you listen to what I'm saying, and at least attempt to answer my original question which was, "How do you measure time without motion?" Despite the fact that you keep trying to evade the issue, it's not really a trick question.
Quote from: Geezer on 19/01/2011 00:37:44Rats! I thought you were serious about the "last time".No, you listen to what I'm saying, and at least attempt to answer my original question which was, "How do you measure time without motion?" Despite the fact that you keep trying to evade the issue, it's not really a trick question. I said you can't in GR. That is the answer, that is my answer, and that is truth. Why have you made me say this over three times now to you? THAT is the answer. There is no if's, no but's... You cannot measure time with motion in relativity, because both cease to exist in GR. This truely is the last time.
QC Julian Barbour makes some sense to me Great minds think alike. I like his views and he is quite poetic presenting them. "the quantum universe is static. Nothing happens; there is being but no becoming. The flow of time and motion are illusions." comes close to how I see it too. the difference possibly being that I define it as 'emergences', and as such having a 'reality' by its own for each 'scale' defined , as we look at it.Ahem A sweet Pdf.Thnx.
something I tried explaining to Geezer but failed miserably.
Quote from: QuantumClue on 30/01/2011 09:27:42something I tried explaining to Geezer but failed miserably.QC, kindly point me to the bit where you tried to explain. I must have missed it.