On Sunday, December 15, 2024 at 11:20:37 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:

On 12/15/2024 1:00 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:

*What lies? Do the improbable for you, the honorable thing; admit you can't 
answer my question about time ordering of events, and that the question 
never even occurred to you. AG*

I don't think anybody can answer your question because you can never seem 
to formulate it clearly.  


*Jesse understood my question and answered it, possibly because we both 
went to Ivy League universities and speak the same language (called English 
BTW). I am still working on his solution. But to the extent I am unable to 
formulate it clearly, follows from the fact that I've been struggling to 
understand what's confused me. Now it's much clearer. I think I was in a 
Newtonian trap, thinking absolute time exists which allows me to compare 
results in different frames at the same time. If I could do this, a paradox 
mighta be evident. Now I see that's impossible. Clearly, relativity doesn't 
have any absolute time, and the comparison I thought I could make, 
relativity simply doesn't allow. The only absolute in relativity is the 
invariance of the SoL, and all apparently peculiar results stem from that 
fact. AG*

For example, you wrote, "if two events are simultaneous in one frame, and 
not in another, will the time order necessarily be reversed in that frame 
and all others"  Notice that you don't even say the time order of what; 
probably not the simultaneous pair since it be no change to reverse them. 
So it must refer to "the other frame" and you ask will the time order be 
reverse in "that frame and all others".  But that makes no sense, of course 
they won't be reversed "in that frame".  If they're reversed it must be in 
some third frame.  And you ask "will the time order necessarily be 
reversed"...If what?  If the car goes faster or slower.  Your question is 
of the form, "If X will Y."

*The context is clear IMO. It involves the two ends of a car which are 
measured simultaneous in time, and any other frame where they might or 
might not be simultanous.  The question followed your previous comment 
about two events not necessarily defining a fitting in some frame, and the 
possibility of the time ordering being reversed. AG*


You remind me of an elderly argumentative engineer, Jim Johnson, I used to 
work with.  Jim would proudly assert, "Nobody can prove anything to me if I 
don't want them to."

 
*As you should be able to see; I have clarified and changed my view of the 
alleged paradox which started this thread. So you obviously wrongly compare 
me to some argumentative person you knew in the past, which has no 
relationship whatsoever with my thoroughness in disentangling my confusions 
about relativity. IMO, the way to understand this subject after defining 
its postulates and deriving the LT and other basic results, is to study the 
various alleged paradoxes and their resolutions. This is rarely done, 
except for, say, the TP, and even in this case, it's generally not done 
correctly. Henceforth, please do me a big favor; resist the temptation to 
dump some undeserved crap, aka shit, on my whatever. I really don't need or 
deserve it. TY, AG*


Brent

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