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Is it a good starting off point to take it as axiomatic that the "natural" relationship between relative space measurements and time measurements is variable ?
Would that take us any further towards detecting the actual mechanism(s?) that caused changes in that variability?
When people talk about an ‘actual mechanism’ they are missing the point. GR provides the mechanism, the very fact that the spacetime dimensions are not ‘flat’ as we might expect is the mechanism and it is well described in the field equations. I think @Janus has described it elsewhere.
Quote from: Janus on 12/02/2020 01:06:53The reason It "wasn't enough" was that there were already "chinks' showing up in Newton's Theories by the time Einstein began to formulate his theory.Do you recognize any "chinks" in Einstein's theories?
The reason It "wasn't enough" was that there were already "chinks' showing up in Newton's Theories by the time Einstein began to formulate his theory.
The point being that "does not provide a mechanism" is not a valid criticism of a theory.
To date, none have been found.
The mechanisms have always been an integral part of the theories.
The history of non-science is full of mechanisms, mostly involving incestuous gods in the form of animals. Scientists occasionally discover bits of mechanism but the equations we consider to be laws of physics are mathematical abstractions of what happens, not lists of the components of nature.
Can you be specific about which mechanisms you are referring to in each case?
In fact Einstein stands out as possibly the only experimentally proven prophet. Others (including Newton) have explained existing observations or had the temerity to question Aristotle's logic, but relativity theory has accurately predicted a whole bunch of stuff, from gravitational lensing to the hydrogen bomb, that had never been seen or even sought previously. Love the wombat poo. Yes, folks, there's nothing too weird or trivial for this forum! Interestingly, though, whilst their turds are isosymmetric with cubes (evolution?) , they do not (cannot) have sharp edges (biophysics).
After all, Einstein really only created the Aether after denying it.
Einstein could discover no mechanism for gravity's influence across space...
So he theorized that matter warps space...
I thought Einstein predicted gravitational waves...just thought we would never detect them.
An argument can always be made that that which can't be detected doesn't exist.
Einstein's theories criticized a multitude of dead geniuses that came before him...I'm sure a few were honest...
An argument can be made for that which can't be detected, even in principle, doesn't exist.