Wiccan_Child
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- Mar 21, 2005
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I hope all my rambling makes sense 
Think about it. What is speed? Speed is the rate of change of distance (or, more accurately, velocity is the time derivative of displacement, or v=dr/dt). But distance from what? Displacement from what?
That's why velocity requires two things: the thing moving, and the thing sitting still doing the measurement. Or rather, the reference frame (what is taken to be stationary).
Velocity is relative. You can't say "This thing has that velocity" without specifying what the measurer is doing.
Consider a car travelling at 30mph. What is that speed measured relative to? The road.
But now imagine that the whole thing is actually a treadmill. What is the speed of the car? Well, relative to the road, it's still 30mph: it's engine is running, its tyres are spinning, etc. It's just that, relative to the ground, the whole thing isn't moving (the forward motion of the car is counteracted by the backward motion of the road).
Consider you're in space, sitting on an elephant, travelling at some constant velocity. There are no stars, no reference points, no nothing. Just you, the elephant, and empty blackness.
Tell me: how would you measure your velocity?
As seen by an outside observer sitting some distance away. But for someone sitting on one of the planets, they only see the other planet moving. This isn't an illusion (e.g., "the sun just looks like it orbits the Earth, but it's really us who orbits it"), but a very real consequence of the lack of absolute motion: without a reference point, velocity makes no sense.Neither is orbiting the other. They are both moving.
Think about it. What is speed? Speed is the rate of change of distance (or, more accurately, velocity is the time derivative of displacement, or v=dr/dt). But distance from what? Displacement from what?
That's why velocity requires two things: the thing moving, and the thing sitting still doing the measurement. Or rather, the reference frame (what is taken to be stationary).
Nope. That's the whole point: we can 'see' it how we want, because what we see in each frame of reference (i.e., where we sit) is as valid as the next. Our brains have evolved to take the Earth (which is big, heavy, flat, etc) to be stationary, since it doesn't change (as opposed to the myriad of things on it which move about). This instinct follows over when we think about celestial movement, even though there is no real reason to think that the Earth is stationary (or, indeed, mobile).Huh? Regardless of how we 'see' it, it is the Earth that orbits the Sun.
Velocity is relative. You can't say "This thing has that velocity" without specifying what the measurer is doing.
Consider a car travelling at 30mph. What is that speed measured relative to? The road.
But now imagine that the whole thing is actually a treadmill. What is the speed of the car? Well, relative to the road, it's still 30mph: it's engine is running, its tyres are spinning, etc. It's just that, relative to the ground, the whole thing isn't moving (the forward motion of the car is counteracted by the backward motion of the road).
Consider you're in space, sitting on an elephant, travelling at some constant velocity. There are no stars, no reference points, no nothing. Just you, the elephant, and empty blackness.
Tell me: how would you measure your velocity?
True, everything else does. No matter which planet we choose to sit on, the rest obstinantly continue to orbit the Sun.Other than planetary moons everything does orbit the Sun.
From our point of view, it is. We're just used to thinking about it going round the Sun. We take the Sun to be stationary out of convention, instinct, and a little bit of logic (everything else goes round the Sun, after all). But as soon as we imagine the galaxy, suddenly the Sun's whizzing round the core (which has become stationary... what was it doing before?).But the Earth isn't stationary.
Give me quantum mechanics any day. I didn't sign on to deal with barn paradoxes!
And someone said Quantum Mechanics didn't make sense![]()
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