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Quote from: Bored chemist on 14/08/2017 20:02:50Quote from: dutch on 13/08/2017 23:14:17Please stop embarrassing yourself.I might not agree with Dutch about many things, but he's spot on with regard to Thebox.What is embarrassing is adults on a science forum who carry on discussing fairy tales as if fact and reality. Now I know I do not fall into that category because I have a brain in my head.
Quote from: phyti on 14/08/2017 17:09:33Bored chemist;I have not seen any tables for td when slow transporting clocks.Here is one to consider.https://app.box.com/s/v722vkyrscqo4v5lye0j4nit05gglocyThanks, that's the closest anyone has yet got to answering the question I asked several pages ago.I consider 30m/s (nearly 70MPH) rather fast for a bike.I also considered continental drift as a possible transport mechanism...
In 1913, Henri Poincaré posthumous Last Essays were published and there he had restated his position: "Today some physicists want to adopt a new convention. It is not that they are constrained to do so; they consider this new convention more convenient; that is all.
Quote from: Thebox on 15/08/2017 10:38:19Quote from: Bored chemist on 14/08/2017 20:02:50Quote from: dutch on 13/08/2017 23:14:17Please stop embarrassing yourself.I might not agree with Dutch about many things, but he's spot on with regard to Thebox.What is embarrassing is adults on a science forum who carry on discussing fairy tales as if fact and reality. Now I know I do not fall into that category because I have a brain in my head. Do you even know the basics of what's being discussed in this thread?
That's for ε = ½. Now prove to me that ε ≠ ¼ etc.
Thanks, that's the closest anyone has yet got to answering the question I asked several pages ago.I consider 30m/s (nearly 70MPH) rather fast for a bike.I also considered continental drift as a possible transport mechanism..
Why would clock B have synchronization to clock A with the assumption ε = ½ even when ε ≠ ½ BECAUSE WE ASSUMED ε = ½ and we have no idea what ε equals. We are free to assume ANY valid convention. We are merely humans and can only know what we can prove in experiment. When infinite valid solutions exist we can't say one must be right.
This sounds so familiar! If one is right, the others are wrong. Who said that?
Why the concern of path ratios?
If Einstein is promoting the idea that A can assume a pseudo rest frame, then it's logically consistent that the time out and back are equal, thus his definition. If A knew his absolute speed in space, he would know the ratio of the light paths out and back, yet he can establish relative simultaneity without knowing it.
What is epsilon?You haven't explained it.
QuoteWhen infinite valid solutions exist we can't say one must be right.This sounds so familiar! If one is right, the others are wrong. Who said that?
When infinite valid solutions exist we can't say one must be right.
Quote from: phyti on Yesterday at 15:23:34QuoteWhen infinite valid solutions exist we can't say one must be right.This sounds so familiar! If one is right, the others are wrong. Who said that?There aren't infinite valid solutions - there are merely infinite potentially-valid solutions, all of which contradict each other and only one of which can actually be a representation of the actual reality.
The two way speed of light in a vacuum as measured in two (inertial) coordinate systems moving with constant relative velocity is the same regardless of any assumptions regarding the one-way speed.[48]
If I did the experiment I proposed,and then did it again,one of two things would happen.I'd get the same answer both times, or I wouldn't.Which would you expect?Would the experiment be repeatable?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 18/08/2017 10:57:47If I did the experiment I proposed,and then did it again,one of two things would happen.I'd get the same answer both times, or I wouldn't.Which would you expect?Would the experiment be repeatable?If your experiment was set up correctly the same as my experiment would need to be, then you should expect repeat results if c is constant that was an identical result every time.However, the atmosphere is not a vacuum. You need to do it in a vacuum.
So, as you say:The one-way speed of light everything: whether it's light, or the number nine bus is simply impossible to measure without applying an arbitrary convention by any known means.
That's a start.I wonder if Dutch agrees.If I do the experiment of synchronising two clocks (next to each other) then moving them slowly then using them to time the arrival of a flash of light- with all the details I previously specified.And then I repeat it.Will I get the same answer twice?
Here's a hint.The answer to this question is "yes" or "no"If I do the experiment of synchronising two clocks (next to each other) then moving them slowly then using them to time the arrival of a flash of light- with all the details I previously specified.And then I repeat it.Will I get the same answer twice?
You keep going on about conventions; well I have tried to define mine.
Einstein never considered the two way journey of light in his ideas . If he had , he would of known and realised that simultaneity is nothing to do with different now's or different rates of time