On Sat, Jun 21, 2025 at 12:45 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]>
wrote:

>

*>> If the enclosure was large enough, you would be able to detect tidal
> forces.  *
>
>
> *> But you still need accurate measurements (depending on the magnitude of
> the tidal forces), a fact you earlier denied. AG*
>

*H**uh? I still deny it! It's pretty obvious that if you don't have
accurate measurements then you're not gonna be able to tell the difference
between gravity produced by a planet or acceleration produced by a rocket
regardless of the size of the volume of space you're dealing with. If you
don't have accurate measurements an observation will tell you nothing.*




>
>    -
>
>

*>>I have no idea what Wheeler's colleagues think about this issue, nor
> does it really matter.*
>
>
> *>> Because you know far more about General Relativity than all the
> professors who have spent their entire careers studying it?*
>
>
> *> More abuse from you.*
>

*That was not rhetorical, it was a legitimate question that, given the
circumstances, was an entirely reasonable thing to ask. And I'm still
waiting for an answer. You said you're not interested in what Physics
professors at major universities who have spent their entire careers
studying General Relativity have to say on the subject of General
Relativity. Why is that? If it's not because you believe you know more
about General Relativity than they do then what is the reason? *


> * > **I think it leaves a lot of unresolved issues to claim that geometry
> alone explains motion for free falling objects, without specifying exactly
> how geometry interacts with material objects.*
>
>
> *But Einstein's field equation of General Relativity does exactly
> that! The equation is: *
>
> *G_μν = (8πG/c⁴)T_μν*
>
> *Left of the equal sign is the Einstein Tensor which describes the shape
> of spacetime which is geometry. And right of the equal sign is the
> Stress-Energy Tensor which describes the matter density, the energy
> density, the pressure, the stress, the tension. and the momentum flux;
> which are all material things. And "specifying exactly how geometry
> interacts with material objects" is what you asked for!*
>
>
> *> The equation does no such thing. It just tells you how to calculate one
> quality, curvature of spacetime, when you know the other (energy / matter
> distribution). *
>

*You said you wanted something "specifying exactly how geometry [the
left-hand side of the equation] "interacts with material objects" [the
right-hand side of the equation]. Einstein's equation gives you exactly
what you asked for. *


> *> It doesn't specify any physical process for the calculation it
> describes. AG *
>

*Are you equally dissatisfied with Newton's most famous equation
F=ma?  What physical process causes force to accelerate mass? Newton didn't
say, but he did say what a force could do to a mass.  *


*>> Speaking of philosophy, can you tell me of one new philosophical
> problem that General Relativity introduced that Newtonian physics didn't
> already have? I can't think of one. *
>
>
> *> Sure, that's easy; time dilation, length contraction, muon clocks, the
> fact that spacetime has curvature, etc. Oh, I can anticipate your response.
> These phenomena have nothing to do with "philosophy". AG *
>

*No, t**hat's not my response at all!  The phenomena you mention in the
above are all new and profound philosophical discoveries, they are
also all very odd and non-intuitive. But odd is not the same as
paradoxical, so all philosophers came to peace with Relativity by about
1925 except for a few in Germany, and they did so for antisemitic reasons
not scientific or philosophical reasons. *

*However Quantum Mechanics was an entirely different matter, that
really did open up a philosophical can of worms, and even today after more
than a century there's no consensus about what it all means. The only thing
everybody agrees on is that like it or loathe it Quantum Mechanics works,
but I can't think of any modern philosopher who has a problem with
relativity.*

*Actually Einstein solved a major philosophical problem that Newton
admitted his theory had. Newton had a big problem with action at a
distance. He thought it was crazy that the sun could influence the movement
of the Earth, which was millions of miles from it, without influencing
anything in between. Newton tried very hard to figure out how forces could
operate with no mediating mechanism but he failed. In Newton's
book Principia Mathematica, the most important book in scientific history,
he made a confession: *

"Hitherto I have not been able to discover the cause of those properties of
gravity from phenomena, and I frame no hypotheses."

*And in a letter to a friend Newton said: *

*"That one body may act upon another at a distance through a vacuum,
without the mediation of any thing else, by and through which their action
and force may be conveyed from one to another, is to me so great an
absurdity, that I believe no man, who has in philosophical matters a
competent faculty of thinking can ever fall into it."*

*And in another letter Newton said: *

*"Tis unconceivable that inanimate brute matter should (without the
mediation of something else which is not material) operate upon & affect
other matter without mutual contact, that gravity should be innate inherent
& essential to matter so that one body may act upon another at a distance
through a vacuum without the mediation of any thing else"*

*Einstein solved the problem by providing the underlying mediating
mechanism Newton was looking for, and it turned out to be
spacetime. Einstein could explain exactly how matter affects spacetime and
just as important how spacetime affects matter. You might complain that
Einstein's explanation is not fundamental enough and you want something
even deeper, but to do that we would have to find out what space and time
are made of, and nobody knows what that could be, and they may not be made
of anything. Space and time may be made of nothing but fundamental stuff,
they may exist at the bottom level of reality. *

*Or maybe not. Nobody knows.   *

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