Einstein swinging from a rope
- From: "Mark" <markhu@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 20 Feb 2006 08:57:45 GMT
Einstein's writings indicate that the gravitational field in essence is
non-different from the effect of swinging a box around in a circle on the
end of a rope. There is of course a hypothetical scientist standing on the
floor of the box in circular motion.
Any opinions? Please don't get too technical. I can appreciate space-time
theory, but I cannot understand such essentials as Maxwell's equations. I
haven't even figured out what a tensor is. I don't support contemporary
contentions that Einstein made mistakes that need to be corrected. I
suspect that the problem is that far too few people can really understand
what he said. The primary warning in space-time theory is that our
perspective is flawed due to the fact that we do not know what our relative
state is. We cannot trust what we perceive.
The problem is that the high-energy state of the components of our reality,
electrons etc., renders them space-time phenomena. That is, they are
grossly affecting the reality that we perceive. That with which we perceive
is also made of what we are perceiving. The mass-energy relationships of
the components of our reality cannot really be known from our perspective.
We only perceive the outcome. The true nature of what we perceive to be an
electron may be very different. Mark
.
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