- Jul 31, 2004
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Yes, this will get into the creation/evolution debate, so this is an on topic thread... but we're gonna start on a tangent, then work back to the topic.
I was wandering around youtube and found this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AZ6N85lNgHY
Pay special attention to the train example.
If lightning strikes two poles at the same time, someone standing motionless between the poles will observe the poles being hit at the same time... therefore he's moving at "normal time"... or through it at a normal rate.
the moving observer will see lightning hit one pole sooner than the other because while the light is traveling toward him, he's also moving... the distance becomes longer for the pole he's moving away from, therefore it takes longer for the light to reach his eye, therefore HE observes the two poles as not being struck simultaneously.
This is used to suggest that his motion caused time itself to slow... because he observes it happening at different times, therefore it DID happen at different times for him.
While, I understand the illustration, I don't draw the same conclusion. Yes, he'll observe the lightning hit the poles at different times due to an optical illusion. Optical illusions don't bend the fabric of time to remain real... he simply was moving, therefore saw one flash too soon and one too late and was mistaken. That doesn't prove time changed...
What about this illustration... something readily observable: Stand a good hundred yards away from someone dribbling a basketball. Watch as you see the ball contact the earth... but hear it later.
Yet, your motion hasn't changed. Should we assume that we are experiencing time flowing at TWO rates simultaneously because we see something happen before we hear it happen? We saw the ball hit, then LATER heard the ball hit... did time stand still? Did we go back in time? Or is it more likely to see different relative speeds tricking our perceptions than to assume the fabric of time has been altered based upon what we're looking at.
I was wandering around youtube and found this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AZ6N85lNgHY
Pay special attention to the train example.
If lightning strikes two poles at the same time, someone standing motionless between the poles will observe the poles being hit at the same time... therefore he's moving at "normal time"... or through it at a normal rate.
the moving observer will see lightning hit one pole sooner than the other because while the light is traveling toward him, he's also moving... the distance becomes longer for the pole he's moving away from, therefore it takes longer for the light to reach his eye, therefore HE observes the two poles as not being struck simultaneously.
This is used to suggest that his motion caused time itself to slow... because he observes it happening at different times, therefore it DID happen at different times for him.
While, I understand the illustration, I don't draw the same conclusion. Yes, he'll observe the lightning hit the poles at different times due to an optical illusion. Optical illusions don't bend the fabric of time to remain real... he simply was moving, therefore saw one flash too soon and one too late and was mistaken. That doesn't prove time changed...
What about this illustration... something readily observable: Stand a good hundred yards away from someone dribbling a basketball. Watch as you see the ball contact the earth... but hear it later.
Yet, your motion hasn't changed. Should we assume that we are experiencing time flowing at TWO rates simultaneously because we see something happen before we hear it happen? We saw the ball hit, then LATER heard the ball hit... did time stand still? Did we go back in time? Or is it more likely to see different relative speeds tricking our perceptions than to assume the fabric of time has been altered based upon what we're looking at.