quant:
I'd like to respond to the opening post of this (new) thread.
What if Newton were not wrong? What if he was correct in stating that both time and space were absolute?
You haven't explained how Newton could possibly be correct, given the 100+ years of experimental verification of the Theory of Relativity.
So far, all your posts have been essentially negative. You have been trying to poke holes in relativity, without making any impact.
I think you should present your argument for Newton being correct, if you have one. Or at least come up with a good refutation of something in relativity, which doesn't rely on a misunderstanding of that theory.
Look for example at the case where someone goes to meet someone on a Wednesday at a café in New York. A week later he returns to the same Café at the same time, again on a Wednesday, to meet the same person. As far as he is concerned nothing has changed he has returned to the same place on the same day of the week, at the same time to meet the same person.
It's a week later. Lots of things will have changed in the meantime. The cafe and the people in it will be different in various ways.
We are aware that during that time interval; the earth has been rotating on its axis at a speed of 1600 km/h approx. apart from that the earth has also been speeding around the sun at a speed of something like 107,000 km/h and at the same time the sun has been tracing a path through the Milky Way Galaxy at 514,000 km/h and the Milky Way Galaxy leaves them all in the shade by moving around the Universe at 2,000,000 Km/h. So nothing is the same, nothing is as it was. The first question is how can that be?
You just explained how it can be. The cafe has rotated around the Earth's axis 7 times. The cafe has moved around the Sun a bit. The cafe has moved around the centre of the galaxy a bit. All these things are true.
If you're asking why the average person doesn't
notice some of these things (we all tend to notice the day-night rotation of the Earth), it seems to me that there are some obvious reasons.
What strange force causes events on earth to remain synchronized in spite of the huge distances and times that have taken place in the interim?
What do you mean by "synchronized", here? What are you saying "remains synchronized"? Be specific.
The second thought that occurs is, is that it doesn’t really matter what has moved, or how far or how fast it has moved; because the aether remains stationary and unchanging.
No aether has ever been detected.
Maybe a third thought should occur: one that involves a consideration of Galileo's observation that there's no way that motion at constant velocity can be detected, without "looking out the window", so to speak. Newton built on that idea and Einstein took it to it's logical conclusion.
This means that all positions can be plotted with reference to the aether, which acts like a Universal frame of reference.
Okay.
Is there anything in the universe that is at rest relative to this aether of yours? And how can you tell it's at rest relative to the aether?
What's the speed of the Earth, relative to the aether, and how did you determine it?
But, I ask you to consider the question of Dark Matter, according to recent research, and before the crazy theory of Dark Energy came along, it was calculated using sophisticated instrumentation that Dark Matter constitutes 90% of all matter in the Universe. Here is a quote from the Department of Energy USA: “Dark matter makes up about 85 percent of the total matter in the universe, accounting for more than five times as much as all ordinary matter. Dark matter played an important role in the formation of galaxies and the evolution of the universe.” Although here the estimate is given at 85% and not 90%.
If you're going to call Dark Energy a "crazy" idea, you ought to explain what's crazy about it.
That aside, consider the properties of Dark Matter, it has such low interaction with matter, that it is estimated that it can travel through a block of lead a light year thick without experiencing any interaction whatsoever and vice-versa. At the same time Dark Matter exerts a pervasive gravitational force. But the truly incredible property of Dark Matter is that it offers zero interaction with any type of electromagnetic radiation; everything from Radio-waves to Gamma rays can travel without the slightest interference from one side of the Universe to the other. Amazing.
Okay, so it's amazing. But do you have any reason to think it's wrong?
Do you know
why the existence of dark matter is postulated? The idea wasn't just invented out of the blue. It was invented to try to solve some puzzling problems. What are
your proposed solutions to those problems?
Just as amazing is the fact that these are identical (not taking into consideration the farcical luminiferous aether concept) to the properties the so scorned aether was once thought to possess.
I don't think that's right. For instance, who said the aether exerts a "pervasive gravitational force"?
The Ancients might have been smarter than we thought.
Which Ancients? The Mayans? The ancient Greeks? The Egyptians? The Babylonians? Paleolithic peoples? What did they say about the aether? I'm fairly sure none of them knew anything about the rotation curves of spiral galaxies.
If you would like to read more about this theory, consider reading "Redefining the Electron" available on Amazon.
Can you give me the summary? I assume you've read it.
Did you write it?