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$$ Any SPACE where a particle is, is NOT empty.
You're so anti-Brian, jOE.!! What is ęther? ```Brian. Joe Fischer wrote: On Tue, RP wrote: Joe Fischer wrote: I can't quote the exact words by Einstein, but I think by 1930 at least, he had discarded Mach. I don't recall issuing support for Mach, at least not for his ideas in general--that was you putting words into my mouth. Who else would try to connect distant matter with local matter? Or distant matter with local Euclidean space, with "space" being the controlling "force" of inertia? It was Weinberg's fallacious argument that I was dismissing, not his objections to Mach per se. IOW, his conclusion doesn't follow from his premises -- it wasa bad argument. He covered a lot of ground in the address, he mayy be able to do better in a presentation paper. Neither Weinberg nor Mach are correct in this article. Mach assumed that inertia depended upon the fixed stars, in the sense that not only the effect of inertia itself, but also the magnitude of that inertia, would depend upon the mass and density of the universe in general. But the negation of Mach's argument doesn't automatically equate to the motions of particles being independent of the fixed stars. So you want to cling to the idea that the fixed stars are hooked to computers that some how calculate just when and how much to resist acceleration, as that is what inertia is, and it is inertia that establishes the mass of an object by "weighing". It isn't the particular magnitude of the inertia of a given mass that is determined by the fixed stars, it is rather the very existence of that inertia itself that depends upon them, and is provided by them. Yet you offer no description of the mechanism process, "it just does"? Since it is this point, and this point alone that Weiberg protested, then he was wrong. Frankly I find any action at a distance as silly, not just plain wrong. Though it may have been a premise of Mach's, it was not the entirety of Mach's theory, and it was also a premise of Einstein's that endured post GR. I read a lot of Einstein's papers, and it it hard to tell when he supported a certain premise. Early on, he naturally used the then-current accepted though on a subject, but how could he possible support the concept of the fixed stars controlling inertia, when freefall is inertial motion. Forget old beliefs, and think of what is possible. IOW, that premise can be correct and Mach incorrect. A lot of the concept of Euclidean space is somewhat like Mach's inertia, and it cannot be supported in the presence of gravity. While the fixed stars seem to be establish a visual/optical reference frame, it takes more than believing in magic to think they have any influence on local matter. How could a lower object "fall" faster than a higher object in freefall if the distant stars had any control over freefalling or orbiting objects? General Relativity does a better job of sorting out free motion based on motion history than Newtonian gravitation. And I think it becomes obvious that the fixed stars are just so far away that they appear to be stationary with respect to local matter, but so far away that there is no possible mechanism for them to have any effect on local motion, and definitely no possible mechanism to control the mass of an object, which is what inertia does (resistance to acceleration). This may seem like a subtle difference in interpretations, but it is however quite different than what Mach envisioned, and it is likewise quite different than what Weinberg suggests in the article. I have seen Weinberg talk a couple of times, and I think he s confident in what he says, and not hesitant to admit when he is wrong. Now let's look at what Weinberg says: [...] Einstein was also at first confused by an idea he had taken from the philosopher Ernst Mach: that the phenomenon of inertia is caused by distant masses. To keep inertia finite, Einstein in 1917 supposed that the universe must be finite, and so he assumed that its spatial geometry is that of a three-dimensional spherical surface. It was therefore a surprise to him that when test particles are introduced into the empty universe of de Sitter's model, they exhibit all the usual properties of inertia. In general relativity the masses of distant bodies are not the cause of inertia, though they do affect the choice of inertial frames. [...]" Note how the last sentence doesn't logically follow, as the premise speaks of the magnitude of inertia, whereas the latter speaks only of the existence of inertia itself. The syllogism is broken. Richard Perry "The choice of inertial frames" is something man does, not nature. I don't see how anybody can reconcile geodesic deviation with inertia determined by fixed stars. I can't even imagine why anybody would assume, let alone postulate that matter a Billion light years can affect motion here. This would be bad enough if there were no gravity, but in the presence of gravity, it becomes bizarre. The concept requires at least _two_ un-needed forces acting, inertia to make the moon want to follow a straight path, and gravity, to exert the forces to make the moon orbit. And all this with no visible means of accomplishing it. It is all built on 16th century thinking. Unless some detectable, yet unknown as of now, real physical "field" exists, action at a distance is not possible. And I think the idea of another "field" that can only be determined by the motion it produces, is identical in silliness to the aether. Joe Fischer Einstein's Mistakes. Any SPACE where a particle is, is NOT empty.!! |
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