On Wed, Jun 4, 2025 at 10:41 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

*> You post like an abusive fool. You demanded I tell you if I know what
> Inertia is, and I did, implicitly.*
>

*You can say what inertia does but you can't say why inertia does that and
not some other thing.  As I said before, it only takes a few how or why
questions before you reach a fundamental mystery. And every correct answer
generates a new question. *



> *> This, of course, doesn't mean I can explain the long half-life of
> muons.*
>

*You can't explain how your wristwatch can tell time either, nevertheless
you know that it can.  *


> *> But my question about Relativity is valid, even if you can't understand
> it, or refuse to do so. The Earth-bound observer calculates the time
> dilation of moving clocks using the LT, but obviously the muons have no
> information of that.*
>

*And Newton used equations to calculate how an apple will fall from a tree,
but obviously the apple had no information about equations, but the fruit
seemed to follow them anyway. The muon is mysterious, but no more so than
the apple.  *


> *> And yet, their clocks appear to fall in line with that time dilation
> prediction, resulting in a change in their half-lives.*
>

*If a muon was a conscious observer (which I'm almost sure it isn't even
though I'll never be able to prove it) the particle would observe no change
in its half life. That's because the rate of "proper time", the time an
observer sees on his wristwatch, never changes regardless of how fast or
slow he's going, or how strong or weak a gravitational field he's in. The
observer always sees his wristwatch ticking at one second per second.*

* > Logically, this is required in order for the speed of light to be
> invariant. But how and why this occurs physically is a mystery IMO. Same
> with the muon clock,*
>

*Same with your wristwatch. I can't explain how a muon without an internal
structure can keep time, and you can't explain why inertia works the way it
does and not some other way.   *

*> the existence of which you are sure of, but can't define their physical
> structure.You can deny these mysteries, and remain a fool. The choice is
> wholly yours. AG *
>

*Deny these mysteries?! I've said over and over again that it's
ridiculously easy to get to a fundamental mystery because it is an
undeniable fact that every iterated sequence of how or why questions either
goes on forever or terminates with a brute fact. And it's also a fact that
you would be unhappy with either outcome, therefore I fear you are destined
to be unhappy. *

*Wisdom is realizing that some mysteries are more important than others. *

*John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>*
hd'
>
>
>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Everything List" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/everything-list/CAJPayv2A_OB4ee%2BKzwUQeyNHQkEsHDpV%3DUcuV8S1%2Biq87GQyPg%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to