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<title>A Brief history of Einsteins special theory of relativity</title>
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<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font color="#993366"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>A<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCLStr_03" align="right" hspace="5" width="300" height="29" border="0">
Brief history of Einsteins special theory of relativity. </b></font></font>The
main conclusions of Einsteins special theory of relativity are the
Lorentz transformation equations. They are called the “<i>Lorentz</i>
transformation equations,” because they had already been
discovered, before Einsteins first paper, by H. A. Lorentz, taking
a Newtonian approach. That is where I will pick up the story about
the Einsteinian revolution in physics, since spatiomaterialism is
merely following in the footsteps of Lorentz. What I will call the
four “Lorentz distortions”are sufficient to explain all the of
the predictions by which Einsteins special theory of relativity
has been confirmed. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">L<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAADoAAAAPCAMAAACC0iwEAAAAPFBMVEUAAAANDAkcGBMqJR04MSZGPjB+AABjV0NxY01/cFeOfGGciWqqlXS4on7HrojVu5Hjx5v8A/sAAAD///8O80d3AAAAEnRSTlP//////////////////////wDiv78SAAAAjUlEQVR4nMWS4Q7DIAiErdCC7qq8/9MOZ9I12dpsNtkuhJzAp/wwLMMKSxjWNdRGtKHQwxn5CC0KT0hwl70IXa1ERVFtnRO0EmYY6FaMITAVUCuWCi+eop56GCKTmr/E1sK3zm8WDk90FcvpYd1Z3aGv5A6NzNmE59pvEfJjRxMlTK17sPD3+if6+z98B9GgH4VRq7SWAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC" name="TtsOtkCLStr_04" align="right" hspace="5" width="125" height="32" border="0">orentz.</font>
By 1887, some eighteen years before Einsteins paper, Michelson and
Morley had made experiments that showed that light has the same
velocity relative to any object, regardless of its own motion. What
made their result puzzling was the Newtonian assumption that the
medium in which light propagates is a “luminiferous ether,” a
very subtle kind of material substance that was supposed to be at
rest in absolute space. Given that the velocity of light is
everywhere the same <i>relative to absolute space</i>, they expected
that the velocity of light, as measured from a material object, to
vary with that objects own velocity in absolute space—just as
the velocity of ripples propagating in a pond arrive faster (or
slower), when a boat is moving toward them (or away from them).</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Michelson
and Morley used an interferometer, which compares the two-way
velocities of light in perpendicular directions; that is, light is
reflected back from mirrors in perpendicular directions and the
signals are compared to see if one is lagging behind the other. They
made measurements at various points in the Earths orbit around the
sun, where the Earth should have different velocities in absolute
space. On a moving object, the time it takes for light to travel both
to and from a distant mirror in the direction of absolute motion
should be different from the time it takes to travel an equal
distance in the transverse direction.<sup><a class="sdfootnoteanc" name="sdfootnote1anc" href="#sdfootnote1sym"><sup>1</sup></a></sup>
The margins of error were small enough, given the velocity of light
and the velocity of the Earth in its orbit around the sun, that it
should have been possible for their interferometer to detect absolute
velocity. But Michelson and Morley failed to detect any difference at
all in the time it took light to travel the same distance in
perpendicular directions. Absolute motion could not be detected.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>Length
contraction.</b></i> The Michelson-Morley result was surprising, but
even before Einstein published his special theory in 1905, Lorentz
had proposed a Newtonian explanation of it. Lorentz showed, in 1895,
that their result could be explained physically, if the motion of
such an apparatus in absolute space caused its length to shrink in
the direction of motion as a function of its velocity by a factor of
<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="StrEqBeta" align="bottom" width="46" height="18" border="0">.
Lorentz argued that this length contraction is a real physical change
in the material object that depends on its motion relative to
absolute space.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
equation was <i>L=L</i><sub><i>o<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="StrEqBeta" align="bottom" width="46" height="18" border="0"></i></sub>,
where <i>L</i><sub><i>o</i></sub> was the length at absolute rest.
The shrinkage had been proposed independently by George F. Fitzgerald
in 1889 and hence became known as the “Lorentz-Fitzgerald
contraction”.<sup><a class="sdfootnoteanc" name="sdfootnote2anc" href="#sdfootnote2sym"><sup>2</sup></a></sup>
</font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Lorentz
tried to explain the length contraction physically, as an effect of
motion through a stagnant ether on the electrostatic forces among its
constituent, charged particles.<sup><a class="sdfootnoteanc" name="sdfootnote3anc" href="#sdfootnote3sym"><sup>3</sup></a></sup>
But he could just as well have taken it to be a law of physics,
making the Lorentz-Fitzgerald contraction the discovery of a new,
basic physical law. (An ontological explanation of it will be
suggested in the last section of this discussion of the special
theory of relativity.)</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Lorentz
also described the length contraction as a mathematical
transformation between the coordinates of a reference frame based on
the moving material object and the coordinates of a reference frame
at absolute rest. Lorentz started with the Galilean transformation by
which Newtonians would obtain the spatial coordinates used on an
object in uniform motion in the x-direction, <i>or x = x - vt</i>,
and combining that with the length contraction he had discovered, he
came up with the transformation equation,
<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAFQAAAAlCAMAAADryz6XAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAADcSURBVHic5ZXBDoQwCESn///TG+MubWGqQDEelngRyXOgBdAeMPwXVEMqoIYRgAI6+vAcD7Q/oohJwp7SXywg2k7tFdDJsws1Jf0WhP3Lz1xIoqWuN1y81UBtIhXQGma/e/Qg9qBD5sPd3obSjylj0DqlpFuymgV6e0gx5b5oHmWKBMk7DbUzu+1D1zPPDSWB5uZc3k/GXEOhHW4oG8WyU5QjBz236KRv6pecUuhCzkW/g0orow0dDFXI2N7vExHGnYZ2wGpFkOzd0Hlw6fqpseY4qPgYfAsat0egH+dmCyGOKLbbAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC" name="StrEqSpace" align="bottom" width="77" height="32" border="0">for
obtaining the spatial coordinates on the moving material object.<sup><a class="sdfootnoteanc" name="sdfootnote4anc" href="#sdfootnote4sym"><sup>4</sup></a></sup>
</font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>Time
dilation.</b></i> There is, however, another distortion that material
objects undergo as a function of their absolute motion. That is a
slowing down of clocks (and physical processes generally) at the same
rate as the length contractions, or the so-called &quot;time
dilation,&quot; which took somewhat longer for Lorentz to discover. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">The
Galilean transformation for time in Newtonian physics is simply </span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><i>t
= t'</i></span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
, because Newtonian physics assumes that time is the same everywhere.
But by using transformation equations to describe the distortions in
material objects, Lorentz found that he had to introduce a special
equation for transforming time: </span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><i>t
= t&nbsp;-&nbsp;vx/c</i></span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><sup><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><span lang="en-US"><i>2
</i></span></font></font></sup></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">(</span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldberg84"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Goldberg</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">,
p. 94). The new factor in the transformation equation, </span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><i>vx/c</i></span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><sup><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><span lang="en-US"><i>2</i></span></font></font></sup></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">,
implied that time on the moving frame varies with location in that
frame. Lorentz called it &quot;local time,&quot; but he did not
attribute any physical significance to it. &quot;Local time&quot; is
not compatible with the belief in absolute space and time, and
Lorentz described it as “no more than an auxiliary mathematical
quantity” (</span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Toretti83"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Torretti</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">,
p. 45, 85), insisting that his transformation equations were merely
“an aid to calculation” (</span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldberg84"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Goldberg</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">,
p. 96). </span></font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">The
slowing down of physical processes is called “time dilation.”
Lorentz discovered this distortion by tinkering with various ways of
calculating the coordinates used on inertial reference frames in
relative motion. Thus, it is natural to describe time dilation as the
slowing down of clocks on the moving reference frame. It was included
in the final version of Lorentz's explanation, now called the
“Lorentz transformation equations.” (</span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Lorentz04"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Lorentz</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
1904) Those equations contained not only the length contraction and
transformation for “local time”, but also the implication that
clocks on moving frames are slowed down at the same rate as lengths
are contracted (that is,
<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="StrEqBeta" align="bottom" width="46" height="18" border="0">).
The final Lorentz equation for time transformation included both the
variation in local time and time dilation:
<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAFQAAAArCAMAAADRwV/nAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAADzSURBVHic5ZbbDsQgCETH///pTTetFxgpIk2zWZ4MxdNRRER5wPB/UHSkLCjKA9CSCYUauKBmBMjIAbUDmtCVRGGI/ib5cOBMDCQvphQXqTJpjAcKXJI7iRQYVLoPVd97vZPVOxLFJqA0qIpIrQP9Y6JpD1o3PRF6HpZc6Fi2kDWUAE0xQyliVqY1sa30fgsXhfpkrq7lNSiP0bcC7VdLUEh354grNW48H9S6iQnKAQU/dJijXFAWVetOOkJQQD/GZB+/42mlUCslERZzbEbXdSGErjY+kGnb0K4XN5faUYlxQcc8qLFqFcsvFI+9A43Y70A/AlMM9qECVTAAAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="StrEqTime" align="bottom" width="79" height="37" border="0">.
</span></font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Though
Lorentz took the distortions that he discovered in fast-moving
material objects to be laws of nature, he did not think that they
were basic. He thought they were effects of motion on the
interactions between electrons and the ether which could be explained
by his electronic theory of matter, and he saw explaining this effect
as the the main challenge to Newtonian physics. The transformation
equations themselves never seemed puzzling to Lorentz, because he
never took them to more than just a mathematical aid to calculation.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">P<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAADoAAAAQCAMAAABwUpxKAAAAQlBMVEUAAAANDAkcGBMzAAAqJR04MSZJAABmAAB2AAB+AABxY01/cFeOfGGciWqqlXS4on7HrojVu5Hjx5v8A/sAAAD///8HY0uoAAAAFHRSTlP/////////////////////////AE9P5xEAAACfSURBVHicxZLbDsMgDENZR3YJJID//2NnqNZpUvfQVlqtgAzkgB8Iz8f9dt2lcAQNu3UMxR4tqE8ibd4reSOqMEVLxKqjWrKxmdFUK5CLcupuFWWfmGq3Hl0KitBW8wiIOlIy+UbDOzDvlV4+aPaymEHkMg4gw62g2peRnR+U6RvU5gs5KtqPwFQW5lzQxndQokwzSidr6Hadif7/D78AE/wjPxtuiaIAAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="TtsOtkCLStr_05" align="right" hspace="5" width="125" height="34" border="0">oincaré.</span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
H. Poincaré thought he saw more clearly what Lorentz had discovered
than Lorentz himself. As early as 1895, Poincaré had expressed
dissatisfaction with Lorentzs piecemeal approach, introducing one
modification of the laws of Newtonian physics after another in order
to account for different aspects of the phenomenon discovered by
Michelson and Morley. Instead of such </span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><i>ad
hoc</i></span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
modifications, he urged the recognition of what he called a
“principle of relativity” to cover all the phenomena involved in
fast-moving objects. As Poincaré put it in 1904, the principle of
relativity requires that “the laws of physical phenomena should be
the same for an observer at rest or for an observer carried along in
uniform movement of translation, so that we do not and cannot have
any means of determining whether we actually undergo a motion of this
kind” (from </span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Toretti83a"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Torretti</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">,
83). </span></font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">A principle
of relativity like this had, in effect, been affirmed by Newton
himself, when he admitted that his laws of motion depend, not on the
absolute velocities of material objects, but only on their relative
velocities. That is, Newton had already denied that absolute rest
could be detected by mechanical experiments. It seemed that absolute
motion could be detected only when Maxwell had discovered that light
could be explained as an electromagnetic wave. Thus, Poincaré saw
Lorentz's discovery of distortions in fast-moving material objects as
a way of extending Newtons principle of relativity to cover
electromagnetic phenomena. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">Understanding
how the undetectability of absolute motion could be a result of the
distortions that Lorentz had discovered, he referred to Lorentz
theory as “Lorentzs principle of relativity” even after
Einstein had published his special theory and Lorentz himself was
attributing the principle of relativity to Einstein (</span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Toretti83b"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Torretti</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
85, </span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldberg84b"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Goldberg</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
212, and </span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Holton73"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Holton</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
178). Indeed, Poincaré joined Lorentz in the attempt to explain the
Lorentz distortions by the motion of material objects through
absolute space, also expecting to find their cause in the dynamics of
electrons; he also thought that motion through the ether caused
material objects to shrink in the direction of motion and natural
clocks to slow down by the exact amount required to mask their
motion, as implied by Lorentzs transformation equations (</span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldberg84b"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Goldberg</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
94-102, </span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Toretti83b"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Torretti</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
38-47). Furthermore, Poincaré apparently thought that what Lorentz
said about those equations in his 1904 work answered his own demand
that it be a “demonstration of the principle of relativity with a
single thrust” (</span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldber84b"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Goldberg</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
214-15).</span></font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Lorentz's
explanation of the distortions was not, however, a complete
explanation of the principle of relativity. There are really two
quite different aspects of the phenomenon described by the principle
of relativity, and Lorentz had explicitly explained only one of them.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">What
Lorentzs electron theory of matter (and Poincarés own
refinements of it) explained physically were the Lorentz distortions
in material objects with absolute velocity. That explained the
negative outcome of the Michelson-Morley experiment: the contraction
of lengths in the direction of motion and the slowing down of clocks
as a function of motion through absolute space does make it
physically impossible to detect absolute motion on a moving object by
measuring the velocity of light relative to it. And that is one way
in which inertial reference frames are empirically equivalent,
because it holds of measurements made using any material object in
uniform motion as one's reference frame, regardless of its motion
through absolute space.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">But there
is more to the principle of relativity than explaining the null
result of the Michelson-Morley experiment. The transformation
equations that Lorentz constructed to describe the effects of
absolute motion on material objects predict the outcomes of other
experiments, such as attempts to measure directly the lengths of
high-velocity measuring rods and the rate at which high-velocity
clocks are ticking away. Though such experiments are more difficult
to perform, they are conceivable, and Lorentz's equations do make
predictions about them: moving measuring rods will be shrunken in the
direction of motion and moving clocks will be slowed down. That
suggests another way of detecting absolute motion. One might compare
measuring rods or clocks that are moving at a whole range different
velocities with one another and take the one with the longest
measuring rods and quickest clocks to be closest to absolute rest.
Hence, the principle of relativity would be false.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">It is not
possible, however, to detect absolute rest in this way, and as it
happens, its impossibility is also predicted by Lorentz's theory,
because he formulated his description of the Lorentz distortions in
terms of transformation equations. Transformation equations are
equations for transforming the coordinates obtained by using one
material objects as a frame of reference into the coordinates
obtained by using another material object as a frame of reference,
and to be consistent, they must work both ways. That is, it must be
possible to obtain the original coordinates by applying the
transformation equations to the transformed coordinates. Thus,
whatever distortions observers at absolute rest may find in material
objects with a high absolute velocity will also be found by observers
in absolute motion in material objects that are at absolute rest. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
recognition that Lorentz's theory, being formulated in terms of
transformation equations, implied that all such inertial reference
frames are empirically equivalent is presumably what led Poincaré to
proclaim that Lorentz had finally explained the truth of the
principle of relativity. Absolute rest and motion cannot be detected
from any inertial reference frame.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Lorentz's
theory was not, however, an adequate explanation of the principle of
relativity, for there is still something puzzling about the empirical
equivalence entailed by the symmetry of the Lorentz transformation
equations. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Lorentz
meant his transformation equations to be a way of describing the
length contraction and time dilation in material objects with
absolute motion, for that would explain the Michelson-Morley
experiment, that is, why absolute motion cannot be detected by
measuring the velocity of light in different directions. But since
the transformation equations describe a symmetry between the members
of any pair of inertial reference frames, they imply that observers
using a fast-moving material object as the basis of their reference
frame would observe a length contraction in measuring rods that were
at absolute rest and a time dilation in clocks at absolute rest. That
makes it impossible to detect absolute rest or motion by comparing
different inertial reference frames with one another. But it is
puzzling, because it is hard to see how both views could be true at
the same time, that is, how two measuring rods passing one another at
high velocity could both be shorter than the other and how two clocks
passing by one another could both be going slower than the other. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In other
words, Lorentz's theory does not really give a physical explanation
of what Poincaré called the &quot;principle of relativity.&quot;
What entails the truth of the principle of relativity is the
description of the Lorentz distortions in terms of transformation
equations; the inability to detect absolute rest and motion by
comparing inertial frames with one another comes from the symmetrical
relationship that transformation equations represent as holding
between the members of any pair of inertial reference frames. That
symmetry is not physically possible, at least, not in the sense of
&quot;physical&quot; that Lorentz had in mind when he tried to
explain the distortions as occurring to material objects because of
their motion in absolute space. If inertial frames are material
objects in absolute space, then their measuring rods cannot both be
shorter than the other and their clocks cannot both be slower. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">As we shall
see, what enables Lorentz's transformation equations to predict the
symmetry of distortions is the &quot;local time&quot; factor in the
time equation, <i>vx/c</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>,
which Lorentz insisted was just an &quot;aid to calculation.&quot; It
represents the readings that would be given by clocks on a moving
reference frame that have been synchronized by using light signals
between them as if they were all at absolute rest, that is, on the
assumption that the one-way velocity of light is the same both ways
along the pathway between any two clocks (as required by Einstein's
definition of simultaneity at a distance). That assumption is false,
as Lorentz understood these phenomena, and clocks on the moving
inertial frame would be mis-synchronized. It can be shown, as we
shall see, that this way of mis-synchronizing clocks on a moving
frame combines with the Lorentz distortions that the moving frame is
actually suffering to make it appear that its own Lorentz distortions
are occurring in the reference frame at absolute rest (or moving more
slowly). This is a physical explanation, given how the other frame's
measuring rods and clocks are measured. But it is an explanation of
the principle of relativity that reveals it to be the description of
a <i>mere appearance</i>. Though there is an <i>empirical equivalence
</i>among inertial frames, a physicist who accepted Lorentz's
Newtonian assumptions would insist that it has a <i>deeper physical
explanation</i>. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
was not Lorentz, however, but Poincaré who declared that Lorentz had
explained the truth of the principle of relativity, and Poincaré's
acceptance of Lorentz's explanation as adequate may have been colored
by his own philosophical commitment to conventionalism. Poincaré
viewed the choice between Euclidean or non-Euclidean geometry as
conventional, and he argued that convention is also what raised
inertia and the conservation of energy to the status of principles
that could not be empirically falsified. Poincaré's acceptance of
the principle of relativity should probably be understood in the
context of this more or less Kantian skepticism about knowing the
real nature of what exists. Considering how the standard of
simultaneity at a distance varies from one inertial reference frame
to another (depending on the &quot;local time&quot; factor in the
Lorentz transformation equations), the principle of relativity could
also be seen as a conventional truth. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Poincaré's
pronouncement that Lorentz's theory had explained the principle of
relativity could not have set well with Lorentz himself. Lorentz may
have continued to call it &quot;Einstein's principle of relativity&quot;
because he realized that it was not <i>explained </i>by his theory
about how spatial and temporal distortions are caused in material
objects by their absolute motion. What is responsible for the
principle of relativity is the symmetry in pairs of inertial frames
entailed by his equations being transformation equations. If the
distortions didnt hold <i>symmetrically </i>in any pair inertial
frames, it would be possible to detect absolute rest and motion. But
to my knowledge, Lorentz never argued explicitly that what he called
&quot;local time&quot; on the moving material object (that is, <i>vx/c</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
in the time equation) represents a mis-synchronization of clocks on
the moving frame that causes the moving frame's own Lorentz
distortions to appear to be occurring in the other inertial reference
frame. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
Newtonian explanation of all the relevant phenomena did not,
therefore, have an adequate defender. Lorentz was more concerned to
find an adequate physical explanation of the distortions he had
discovered in material objects, and Poincaré was more interested in
defending conventionalism. That is the Newtonian context in which
Einstein's special theory of relativity won the day. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">E<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAADoAAAARCAMAAAC7Dk/vAAAASFBMVEUAAAANDAkcGBMzAAAqJR04MSZJAABGPjBmAAB2AAB+AABjV0NxY01/cFeOfGGciWqqlXS4on7HrojVu5Hjx5v8A/sAAAD///8Rn7hnAAAAFnRSTlP///////////////////////////8AAdLA5AAAAJRJREFUeJzF09EOwiAMBVCmVNRSKOz+/7daiNFliVtkD7svtIGT8gDu+bjfrkNxR6gbzjGKkXyoXogSUllufjvepLG1WqEaTcwSK4iTeSvQ1iSbU6MisnogZFWwFIjkABAw5Shr6hZTG9V2ULwNsxJENHVK7yO7dIZSp6Fa/YuuL9wpe+vUM4on2qH/50x6xhse/nQvt8YoCx9RL4cAAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="TtsOtkCLStr_06" align="right" hspace="5" width="125" height="36" border="0">instein.
</span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">Einstein
took a dramatically different approach from both Lorentz and
Poincaré. Instead of taking the principle of relativity to be an
empirical hypothesis that could be explained physically by deeper,
Newtonian principles, or as a conventional truth, Einstein raised the
principle of relativity to the status of a </span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><i>postulate</i></span></font></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">,
which was not to be explained at all, but rather accepted as basic
and used to explain other phenomena (</span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Zaharb"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Zahar</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
90-2). The mathematical elegance of Einstein's explanation of these
phenomena is stunning. From the premise that all inertial reference
frames are empirically equivalent, he derived a description of how
two different inertial reference frames would appear to each other;
that is, he deduced the Lorentz transformation equations. </span></font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Einstein's
new approach can be seen most clearly by considering the structure of
his argument. It is represented below in a diagrammatic form. </font></font></font>
</p>
<center>
<table width="431" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
<col width="128">
<col width="152">
<col width="151">
<tr>
<td width="128" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><b>Einstein's
<br>Premises:</b></font></p>
</td>
<td width="152" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><i><b>The
Principle of Relativity</b></i></font></p>
</td>
<td width="151" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt">The
laws of nature apply the same way on all inertial frames.</font></font></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="128" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font></p>
</td>
<td width="152" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><i><b>The
Light Postulate</b></i></font></p>
</td>
<td width="151" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt">The
velocity of light is the same on all inertial frames.</font></font></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="128" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font></p>
</td>
<td width="152" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><i><b>The
Definition of Simultaneity&nbsp; at a Distance</b></i></font></p>
</td>
<td width="151" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt">The
local event halfway through the period required for light to
travel to the distant event and back is simultaneous with the
distant event.</font></font></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="128" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font></p>
</td>
<td width="152" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font></p>
</td>
<td width="151" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="128" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><b>Einstein's<br>Conclusions:</b></font></p>
</td>
<td width="152" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt">To
obtain the second frame's coordinates from the first frame:</font></font></p>
</td>
<td width="151" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt">To
obtain the first frame's coordinates from the second frame:</font></font></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="128" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><i>Lorentz
transformation equations </i></font><font color="#000000">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</font><font color="#000000"><font size="1" style="font-size: 7pt">(kinematic
phenomena)</font></font></p>
</td>
<td width="152" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="center"><font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAFQAAAAlCAMAAADryz6XAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAADcSURBVHic5ZXBDoQwCESn///TG+MubWGqQDEelngRyXOgBdAeMPwXVEMqoIYRgAI6+vAcD7Q/oohJwp7SXywg2k7tFdDJsws1Jf0WhP3Lz1xIoqWuN1y81UBtIhXQGma/e/Qg9qBD5sPd3obSjylj0DqlpFuymgV6e0gx5b5oHmWKBMk7DbUzu+1D1zPPDSWB5uZc3k/GXEOhHW4oG8WyU5QjBz236KRv6pecUuhCzkW/g0orow0dDFXI2N7vExHGnYZ2wGpFkOzd0Hlw6fqpseY4qPgYfAsat0egH+dmCyGOKLbbAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC" name="image002" align="bottom" width="84" height="37" border="0"></font></p>
</td>
<td width="151" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="center"><font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAFAAAAAlCAMAAADiIJ7tAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAADfSURBVHic5ZbbDsQgCETH///pbbf1giAZ0Kdd06SN4ukARYpyeOCHgKYl1BINhN7beDHgZY5uiD55XxiWaIWPAAm877A8poADGq+oImSngUJhGggziTp4LBDFBjZqWGFw/CcQOIn9Zr/VU/1sd4HGdHYI4CmFbgiD+l6aB0wo3FqPblgs60hDFHkUqKOOsgW05nmge+g5Dyug+WFqOTxwUUczhkzKXJiA0YTB9eXWO+ceBW3DAHuVP+fRWFhLB1yFAji9JwesvkigjiD/54Dq7crcSImf5dTZ6O45DsyMD7ZjCnnk54RFAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC" name="image004" align="bottom" width="80" height="37" border="0"></font></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="128" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font></p>
</td>
<td width="152" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="center"><font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAACEAAAAQCAMAAACvHOZVAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAABOSURBVHiclY9BEgAgCALp/5+ubCxLxYmjLQFolfBDJPA5oybylGGefkeYu3mGyLiViBOgfks8f2wiWwFdQFbcLWNAJpGaqxorQTq4MKIO+18B3KhV6LsAAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="image006" align="bottom" width="33" height="16" border="0"></font></p>
</td>
<td width="151" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="center"><font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAACEAAAAQCAMAAACvHOZVAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAABNSURBVHicpZBRCgAgCEPn/S8dUorGlh8NQRhPXcEm4ZvARGAmdsGLDCOIaG676rQFQW6l2Yi+oxIsbponB33FFUgB4kvQiGcIlUHcU1r7egHcdvVOgQAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==" name="image008" align="bottom" width="33" height="16" border="0"></font></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="128" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font></p>
</td>
<td width="152" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="center"><font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAACAAAAAMCAMAAAA0yk+LAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAABASURBVHicY2AkABiIV4BDKVyYgaACnFYwgAAWBXBxFEkGqDDESAZGBMZpPZrhSCYwwgzCZj+yFUhasLmRcEgCAA21AVBW/R6MAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC" name="image010" align="bottom" width="32" height="12" border="0"></font></p>
</td>
<td width="151" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="center"><font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAACAAAAAMCAMAAAA0yk+LAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAABASURBVHicY2AkABgoVMBAQAEDQQVgM0AAUytYkAFqCQOSKANCK9yRWK1hQNBweSQTkARRlKC6DkMXhhtRjMIFAA3KAVBsBAX4AAAAAElFTkSuQmCC" name="image012" align="bottom" width="32" height="12" border="0"></font></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="128" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000">&nbsp;</font></p>
</td>
<td width="152" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="center"><font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAFQAAAArCAMAAADRwV/nAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAADzSURBVHic5ZbbDsQgCETH///pTTetFxgpIk2zWZ4MxdNRRER5wPB/UHSkLCjKA9CSCYUauKBmBMjIAbUDmtCVRGGI/ib5cOBMDCQvphQXqTJpjAcKXJI7iRQYVLoPVd97vZPVOxLFJqA0qIpIrQP9Y6JpD1o3PRF6HpZc6Fi2kDWUAE0xQyliVqY1sa30fgsXhfpkrq7lNSiP0bcC7VdLUEh354grNW48H9S6iQnKAQU/dJijXFAWVetOOkJQQD/GZB+/42mlUCslERZzbEbXdSGErjY+kGnb0K4XN5faUYlxQcc8qLFqFcsvFI+9A43Y70A/AlMM9qECVTAAAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="image014" align="bottom" width="84" height="43" border="0"></font></p>
</td>
<td width="151" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="center"><font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAE0AAAAoCAMAAACM7odrAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAADpSURBVHiczZVJEsUgCAXb+1/6L/KNyBAnKhVXVoDmCUYomYsv0iCRRsmklRQaahPSGOVCmge0C/bghKTx3AWQ3hXKxaDqQpLG2pRThdD27oF92i3znx+bhCAqonXhezTfqVPoHDTugq9NxpsefPSvF7Q8IqnyKPSFPKSJ/t9gtlb+ST1tzbyirF3sONmatsceLNM2rLYeBzRdHcoJzX6fpzkezps8SfOapIfPPM3x0BOKuS7omUp/n+hIyzQ7oDD2mHTT2l/dS4t6a2G42vZoxafpqgWj0sPZoaRrpN+cIW1pJT4gWxHv0X5MgQrYZJSh4wAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==" name="image016" align="bottom" width="77" height="40" border="0"></font></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="128" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left"><font color="#000000"><i>Relativistic
increase in mass </i></font><font color="#000000">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</font><font color="#000000"><font size="1" style="font-size: 7pt">(dynamic
phenomena)</font></font></p>
</td>
<td width="152" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="center"><font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAF0AAAAlCAMAAAAX3hVdAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAAC8SURBVHic7dXRDoAgCAXQ6///dJvpQhIlkJpbziedJ9BEpMiGX99FB0oP0Ssfpde+n67HHXrUzjwKJPBTFFQla9dX4wnk6kXo/Ooht3W6+P/C1Ib62thVV88UOdHHvDEX3TLrRnl0nu89f4fOH5DOg6LWu38sM2y6cOpTXP8IvKbXslTyybN5zLwzvJiCTwoHP4HrwhIhzgGayQCZVYBE9WZ0gX5R0iM22hi1Di42ulSlFKfqqMaf644Wqx935gx0LITV2wAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==" name="image018" align="bottom" width="93" height="37" border="0"></font></p>
</td>
<td width="151" style="border: none; padding: 0cm">
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="center"><font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAFkAAAAlCAMAAAAeNbUnAAAAD1BMVEUAAAD8A/v8A/sAAAD////nTSorAAAAAnRSTlP/AOW3MEoAAADDSURBVHic7dbhDoMgDATg4/1f2qksyFHWcoPEZRL9AdIvtYKKtKrhr2QvUpYxWX555+EHjuac6RVyCrF3kuOwKK+oxlASj3yRy7aaLZdttXePNk221yiU1pen5uxuKy3lIvdp8RYCYfYUTqVJzZc7MI1zX5fbcUm2JoHi21UbkM2nCwqXZGtSXmKg/ogMmlS/Y2CrklzdA3ggKuN6vjcZqLjRtVNfg5nz93KyZa5yB3HqjFwIO+LD84vJWlv2r/qT3+4N/SYL4A2dV7IAAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="image020" align="bottom" width="89" height="37" border="0"></font></p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
</center>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
assumption that inertial frames are all empirically equivalent takes
the form of three premises in Einsteins argument: the Principle of
Relativity, the Light Postulate, and Einstein's Definition of
Simultaneity at a Distance (see table). Einstein's principle of
relativity holds, with Poincaré, that the laws of nature hold in the
same way on every inertial reference frame. That allowed Einstein to
assume that Maxwell's laws of electromagnetism hold universally, and
he considered what would be true of two different inertial frames in
the same world. But in order to deduce the Lorentz transformation
equations, Einstein also had to assume that that the velocity of
light is the same relative to every inertial frame (the light
postulate) and, accordingly, that simultaneity at a distance is
defined on each reference frame as if the velocity of light is the
same both to and back from a distance object. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">What
Einstein deduced from these premises are the “Lorentz
transformation equations,” that is, equations for transforming the
coordinates of any given inertial reference frame into those of any
other. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The Lorentz
transformation equations imply that any material object moving
relative to any other inertial frame at a velocity approaching that
of light will appear to suffer the Lorentz distortions: its clocks
(and all physical processes) will be slowed down, and its measuring
rods (and all material objects) will be shortened in the direction of
its motion—both by the same amount,
<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="StrEqBeta" align="bottom" width="46" height="18" border="0">,
which is a function of its velocity in the observers reference
frame. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Einstein
also inferred from these kinematic distortions and his principle of
relativity that the mass of objects moving in an inertial frame
increases at the same rate, making three distortions altogether. That
dynamical implication is the source of Einstein's most famous
equations, <i>E = mc</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
should be emphasized that there are really two sets of transformation
equations. It may not seem that way, because Einstein's conclusion is
often stated as just one of the two sets of equations listed above,
making it look mathematically simpler. But that formulation overlooks
a mathematical detail and thereby obscures what Einstein's conclusion
is about.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Though the
Lorentz transformation is exactly the same both ways between the
members of any pair of inertial reference frames, it requires two,
non-identical sets of transformation equations, because their
relative velocity has the opposite sign for each observer. That is,
the two coordinate systems are set up so that their origins coincide
when <i>t = 0</i> and <i>t' = 0</i>, and since they are moving in
opposite directions, the relative velocity is <i>v</i> for one of
them and <i>-v</i> for the other. Thus, in order for the
transformation to be symmetrical, one set of transformation equations
has to have the opposite sign for the second factor in the numerator
of the equations for space and time. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Since this
seems to be a mere technicality, the conclusions of Einsteins
argument are usually represented as a single set of Lorentz
transformation equations (the first set in the above table).
Duplication is avoided by introducing a special mathematical symbol
to make the single set of equations represent both transformations in
any pair of inertial frames. Thus, Einstein's conclusion seems more
like just another universal law of nature. But this is just homage to
the Pythagorean ideal of mathematical simplicity, which obscures the
fact that Einstein's theory is, in the first instance, about the
symmetry that holds between the members of every pair of inertial
frames. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
should also be emphasized that Einstein's theory is about how
<i>reference frames</i> are related, and only indirectly about the
material objects on which they are based. Though it does have
implications concerning the relationship between material objects
with a high relative velocity, that relationship is described by way
of a mathematical transformation that holds between the reference
frames based on them.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Inertial
reference frames are based on material objects that are not being
accelerated, and what makes the material object a reference frame is
that it is used as the basis for a coordinate system by which the
locations and times of events throughout the universe can be
measured. (For this purpose, it is useful to think of an inertial
reference frame as a grid of rigid bars extending wherever needed in
space with synchronized clocks located everywhere.) </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Notice that
Einstein's three premises are all about reference frames based on
material objects. Indeed, his definition of simultaneity prescribes
how clocks must be synchronized to set up such a reference frame. The
light postulate makes explicit the assumption about the velocity of
light on which his definition of simultaneity is based. And the
principle of relativity states that all the laws of physics will hold
the same way within that reference frame as every other one, that is,
will make correct predictions about what happens in that reference
frame. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Einstein
derives conclusions from his premises by assuming that there are two
different inertial reference frames in the world and figuring out how
they must appear to one another. Since his premises are about their
reference frames, it is hardly surprising that his conclusion is
about a mathematical transformation between their coordinates. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Indirectly,
however, Einstein's conclusion is a description of how material
objects with different constant velocities are related to one another
as parts of the same world, since the reference frames in question
are based on material objects. But to see Einstein's conclusion as a
description of how material objects are related in space is to take
Lorentz's approach. For Lorentz, these same transformation equations
were just a mathematically convenient way of describing <i>from the
absolute frame </i>the spatial and temporal distortions that occur in
material objects with a high velocity in absolute space. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">By calling
his argument a theory of <i>relativity</i>, Einstein emphasized that
his theory is about the empirical equivalence of all inertial
reference frames, not the relationship between the material objects
on which they are based. Observers on each inertial reference frame
have their own view of the relationship between the material objects
involved, but they are different views, and it is their views that
are related by the Lorentz transformation equations. The symmetry of
the relationship between their reference frames is what is crucial
for Einstein, because that is what rules out any way of detecting
absolute rest or motion by comparing inertial frames to one another
and ensures that there is nothing to distinguish one inertial frame
from another except their velocities relative to one another. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
Lorentz distortions in material objects are, however, a consequence
of the Lorentz transformation equations that Einstein deduced. And if
one does follow Lorentz, interpreting them as a way of describing the
material objects on which the inertial reference frames are based,
then the Lorentz transformation equations lead to paradoxes, as I
have already suggested. Those equations imply that observers using
any given inertial reference frame will find the Lorentz distortions
occurring in the material objects on which the <i>other </i>inertial
reference frame is based, and thus, the symmetry of the
transformation for any pair of inertial frames leads to paradoxes. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Consider
two inertial frames in motion relative to one another. From the first
frame it appears that clocks on the second frame are slowed down.
That would make sense, if from the second frame, it appeared that
first-frame clocks were speeded up. But special relativity implies
that it also appears from the second frame that clocks on the first
frame are slowed down. That is, the distortions are <i>symmetrical </i>on
Einsteins theory, not the reverse of one another, as one might
expect. And if the Lorentz distortions are really symmetrical, it is
inconceivable that the two inertial frames are just material objects
moving relative to one another in absolute space, because in absolute
space, there cant be two clocks next to one another both of which
are actually going slower than the other. If one assumes that
Einstein's theory is describing material objects, one must give up
the assumption that those objects are located in absolute space. They
are, of course, parts of the same world, but they must be related to
one another in some other way. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The same
problem arises from the symmetry of the length contraction and
relativistic mass increase, for there cannot be two measuring rods
passing one another in space that are both shorter than the other.
Nor can there be two material objects both be more massive than the
other. It is simply not possible for material objects located in
absolute space.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">None of
this should be a surprise, however, because even the <i>Light
Postulate </i>itself is incompatible with absolute space (or at
least, with the assumption that light has a fixed velocity relative
to absolute space). Though Newtonian physics had taken absolute space
to contain the medium in which light propagates, Einstein assumed
that the velocity of light relative to every object is the same,
regardless of their own velocities relative to other objects in the
world. Thus, Einstein held that the velocity of light would be the
same in both members of any pair of inertial frames. This is not
possible, if electromagnetic waves propagate through (an ether in)
absolute space, like waves in water, for the motion of an object
through waves propagating in space would change the velocity of those
waves relative to the object—just as the motion of a row boat
through ripples propagating in a pond changes the velocity of those
ripples relative to the boat. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Taken
as a description of the relationship between material objects in
space, therefore, Einstein's special theory of relativity leads to
paradoxes. But Einstein was not discouraged by these paradoxes. He
was not thinking of inertial reference frames as material objects
that are related in space, that is, in absolute space, or a space
that is the same for both material objects. He was making a more
abstract, mathematical argument and, in the process, giving physics a
new standpoint from which to explain all physical processes. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">That
Einstein's basic approach is different from Lorentz's can be seen in
what made Einstein curious about these phenomena in the first place.
It was not the Michelson-Morley experiment, but rather something
peculiar about the connection between classical mechanics and
Maxwells theory of electromagnetism (</span></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Zaharb"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US"><u>Zahar</u></span></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">
99-100). Einstein realized that even though Maxwells theory was
standardly interpreted as referring to absolute space, absolute space
was not needed in order to explain electromagnetic phenomena. For
example, a conductor moving through a magnetic field at absolute rest
moves electrons exactly the same way as if it were at absolute rest
and the magnetic field were moving. That is what suggested the
principle of relativity to Einstein, and though from it he derived
the same transformation equations that Lorentz had proposed in 1904,
Einstein claimed not to know about Lorentz's 1904 work.</span></font></font><font color="#000000"><sup><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US"><a class="sdfootnoteanc" name="sdfootnote5anc" href="#sdfootnote5sym"><sup>5</sup></a></span></font></sup></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">
</span></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">By raising
the principle of relativity to the status of a <i>postulate</i>,
Einstein was assuming, in effect, that the deepest truth that can be
known about the nature of space and time is that inertial frames are
all empirically equivalent. And by relying on the predictions of
measurements derived from that principle to justify his theory,
Einstein had the support of the positivists, who dominated philosophy
of science at that time. Indeed, Einstein admits to having been
influenced by Ernst Mach at the time of his first paper on special
relativity. To positivists, the paradoxes mentioned above about two
clocks both going slower than the other and two measuring rods both
shorter than the other are not real problems, but merely theoretical
problems. Theoretical propositions that could not be spelled out in
terms of observations were dismissed as &quot;metaphysical,&quot; as
if theories were mere instruments for making predictions. That
attitude could be taken about the aforementioned paradoxes, because
there is never any occasion in which two clocks can be directly
observed both going slower than the other (or two measuring rods
observed both shorter than the other). Observations are made from one
inertial reference frame or another, and if both members of some pair
of inertial frames are observed from a third reference frame, their
clocks and measuring rods do not appear this way because of the
Lorentz distortions that are introduced by its own velocity relative
to them. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">Though
when taken as a description of material objects, the special theory
of relativity is incompatible with the existence of absolute space,
Einstein did not attempt to use its implications to show that
absolute space does not exist. He was making a mathematical argument
to show that accepted theories in Newtonian physics, which did assume
the existence of absolute space, could all be replaced by theories
that do not mention absolute rest or motion at all.</span></font></font><font color="#000000"><sup><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US"><a class="sdfootnoteanc" name="sdfootnote6anc" href="#sdfootnote6sym"><sup>6</sup></a></span></font></sup></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">
All he explicitly claimed was that physics does not require an
“absolutely stationary space” and that the notion of a
luminiferous ether will prove to be superfluous” because
the “phenomena of electrodynamics as well as of mechanics possess
no properties corresponding to the ideas of absolute rest”
(</span></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US"><u>Einstein</u></span></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">,
1923 p. 37). It could be argued, therefore, that Einstein was merely
imitating empiricist skepticism about theoretical entities generally
by casting doubt on the reality of absolute space. </span></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">As it
turned out, Einstein's theory proved to be remarkably successful in
making surprising predictions of new experiments. For example,
unstable particles have longer half-lives when moving at velocities
approaching that of light. Clocks flown around the earth are indeed
slowed down compared to clocks that stayed at home. The most famous
new prediction of special relativity, <i>E = mc</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>,
has been confirmed repeatedly. It is a consequence of the
relativistic increase in mass, which Einstein first pointed out, and
without it, high energy physics as we know it today would be
inconceivable. Finally, the equations of special relativity have
become (after Dirac) the foundation of quantum field theory as well
as Einsteins theory of gravitation. The Lorentz transformation is
now so basic to physics that “covariance” (or “Lorentz
covariance”) is taken as a constraint on all possible laws of
physics. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">To be sure,
Newtonian physicists complained about the loss of intuitive
understanding that came with the acceptance of Einstein's way of
explaining these phenomena. It was no longer possible to construct in
ordinary spatial imagination a picture of the nature of the world.
But that objection did not detract from the predictive success of
Einstein's theory, and the Einsteinian revolution made the capacity
of mathematical arguments to make surprising predictions of precise
measurements the establishment criterion for accepting theories in
contemporary physics. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">But
physics is not just mathematics. A theory in physics is generally
thought to be true when it corresponds to what exists, and if the
special theory of relativity does not correspond to material objects
in absolute space, we want to know what it does correspond to. The
success in making surprising predictions of what happens by which
Einstein's theory has been confirmed means that it corresponds to
regularities that hold of change in the world, but it is natural to
want to know the nature of what exists that makes those regularities
true. The answer given by contemporary physics is spacetime, and it
was Minkowski that has made that answer possible.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">M<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAADoAAAAQCAMAAABwUpxKAAAARVBMVEUAAAAcGBMzAAAqJR04MSZJAABGPjBmAAB2AAB+AABjV0NxY01/cFeOfGGciWqqlXS4on7HrojVu5Hjx5v8A/sAAAD///+jfPvlAAAAFXRSTlP//////////////////////////wAr2X3qAAAAvUlEQVR4nMWT3Q7CIAyFmVR0hVHoef93tWyySNyN82INNOXno6cE3Px83G+nzM3utP2H4sDK0SRQtUc7Kq5aB7iv0DEapXkeUGawbV+sSdSGarI4Kaogqy1oirWhqQ0+0RhyojUZpRzMKxXEmNe5yY5DyCKG8rJJ2spdUZn0jW4tyB6WxC2bb1lDxBdqFzOgCylChQdSqK0WhZDpMDEd7YKBEUXxWohMXvFoJbC3QRT1ZUR/tyvRK97w6U/3AqBKI3Ll7P5GAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC" name="TtsOtkCLStr_07" align="right" hspace="5" width="125" height="34" border="0">inkowski.
</font>In 1908, Minkowski offered a mathematically elegant way of
representing what is true from all inertial frames, according to
Einsteins special theory of relativity, using only the coordinates
of any single inertial frame.<sup><a class="sdfootnoteanc" name="sdfootnote7anc" href="#sdfootnote7sym"><sup>7</sup></a></sup>
His was a “graphic method” which he said allows us to “visualize”
what is going on. The key to his diagram was to represent time in the
same way as space, and that is what has led to the belief that what
exists is not space and time, but rather spacetime. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">In
Minkowskis “spacetime diagrams”, time is represented as a
fourth dimension perpendicular to the three dimensions of space
(though when comparing two inertial frames, the spatial dimensions
can be reduced to one by a suitable orientation of their coordinate
frames). A material object at rest in space is represented,
therefore, as a line running parallel to the time axis, and a
material object with a constant, non-zero velocity is represented by
a line inclined slightly in the direction of motion. Units for
measuring time and space are usually chosen so that the path of light
in spacetime (the “light-line”, <i>t = x/c</i>) bisects the time
and space axes, making the “basic unit” of distance how far light
travels in a unit of time. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Since the
second frame of reference is based on a moving object, we can think
of the tilted line representing its pathway as its time axis. From
such a moving reference frame, the location of an object at rest in
the first frame (such as one always located at its origin) would
change relative to the moving frame. So far, this diagram of space
and time would be acceptable in classical Newtonian physics, because
it represents a so-called Galilean transformation for the coordinates
of moving reference frames (in which distances in space would be
related as <i>x' = x VT</i>, where <i>v</i> is their relative
velocity in the <i>x</i>-direction.) </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">What
Minkowski discovered was that the Lorentz transformation for moving
reference frames could be represented by tilting the space line of
the moving frame equally in the opposite direction and lengthening
the units of time and space. That is, the time-line and the
space-line of the moving frame are inclined symmetrically around the
pathway of light. (See the comparison of the Newtonian Diagram of
Space and Time and Minkowski's Spacetime Diagra</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: -2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><img 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" name="SpacetimeDgm" align="bottom" width="637" height="350" border="0"></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In either
the Newtonian or Minkowski's diagram, every point represents the
location of a possible <i>event </i>in space and time (called a
“world-point”), and superimposing a second reference frame makes
it possible to give such coordinates in either reference frame. From
the coordinates for any event in the first reference frame, we can
simply read off the coordinates for the same event in the moving
reference frame, and <i>vice versa</i>. In the case of event <i>E</i>,
for example, the coordinates in the first frame are <i>(2,1)</i>, and
in Minkowski's diagram, they are <i>(1.3,0.3)</i>. All possible
reference frames can be represented in this way, each with a
different tilt to its time-axis representing its velocity relative to
the first. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The two
reference frames in the Newtonian diagram have a very simple
relationship, because time coordinates are the same for both
reference frames and there is no change in the units of either time
or space. But Minkowski's spacetime diagram represents the Lorentz
transformation, and not only are the units of time and space
different, but the space-line of the moving reference frame is
inclined relative to the first reference frame. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Minkowskis
spacetime diagram yields the same coordinates for the second
reference frame that are obtained from the Lorentz transformation
equations deduced by Einstein. Thus, it predicts that measurements of
the second inertial frame will reveal its clocks to be slowed down
and its measuring rods to be contracted in the x-direction. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">But since
the Lorentz transformation works both ways, it is possible to start
with the second (tilted) reference frame and obtain coordinates for
events in the first reference frame. Thus, it predicts that the
moving observers will detect Lorentz distortions occurring in the
first frame. This symmetry about the relationship between inertial
reference frames makes it impossible to single out any particular
frame as being at absolute rest by comparing reference frames with
one another. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Minkowski's
spacetime diagram may seem to mitigate the paradoxes resulting from
the symmetry of the relationship between members of any pair of
inertial reference frames, because it enables us to &quot;picture&quot;
two clocks both ticking away slower than the other and two measuring
rods both shorter than the other. It is just a result of how the
inertial reference frames are related to one another. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">But this
wonderful power of Minkowski's spacetime diagram to represent these
puzzling phenomena would not be possible, if the space-lines of
different reference frames had the same slope. The inclined
orientation of the space-line of the second inertial frame relative
to the first frame is crucial to representing the Lorentz
transformation, and it represents a disagreement between inertial
observers about simultaneity at a distance. That is, observers using
different inertial reference frames will disagree about which events
at a distance are simultaneous with the origins of their systems when
they pass by one another. That is the source of all the ontological
problems with the belief in spacetime. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Though
it is possible to interpret Minkowski's spacetime diagram as just a
useful mathematical device for predicting the measurements that would
be made on different inertial frames, that is what the Lorentz
transformation equations already do. The historical significance of
Minkowski's diagram is that it enables us to &quot;picture&quot; what
exists in a world where Einstein's special theory of relativity is
the deepest truth about the world. Thus, it leads to the belief in
spacetime (that is, &quot;spatiotemporalism,&quot; as I called it in
<font face="Arial, sans-serif">Spatiomaterialism</font>, or
&quot;substantivalism about spacetime,&quot; as it is called in the
literature.)</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
belief in spacetime comes from realism about special relativity.
Scientific realism holds that theories in physics are true in the
sense of corresponding to what exists, and spacetime is what must
exist, if Einstein's special theory of relativity is the deepest
truth about the real nature of what exists as far as space and time
are concerned. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">With regard
to space and time, Newtonian realists would say that what their
theories correspond to is absolute space and absolute time, that is,
to a three dimensional space all of whose parts exists at the present
moment and endure simultaneously through time. But that is not what
Einstein's special theory of relativity corresponds to, because it
implies that observers on all possible inertial reference frames are
equally correct about the times and places of the events that occur
in the world, even though they disagree about the simultaneity of
events at a distance. What all the different inertial observers say
about the times and places of events can, however, be true at the
same time, only if what exists is represented by Minkowski's
spacetime diagram. Thus, spacetime is the natural answer to the
question about what corresponds to Einstein's special theory of
relativity. According to realists about special relativity, what
exists is spacetime, a four-dimensional entity that contains time as
a dimension and, thus, is not itself in time. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">Though
Einstein may merely have been arguing in the spirit of the empiricist
skepticism that prevailed in philosophy at that time, Minkowski made
it possible to give a realist interpretation of Einsteins special
theory. His spacetime diagram showed how Einstein's theory could be
interpreted as a description of what really exists in the case of
space and time. Minkowski must have realized that he was giving a
realist interpretation of Einstein's special theory of relativity
when he introduced his spacetime diagrams; he said (</span></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Minkowski23"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US"><u>Minkowski</u></span></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">
75) that “space by itself, and time by itself, are doomed to fade
away into mere shadows, and only a kind of union of the two will
preserve an independent reality”. In any case, later in the
twentieth century, when logical positivism gave way to scientific
realism, Einsteins skepticism about absolute space, if that is
what it was, spawned the belief in the existence of spacetime.
Indeed, regardless what Einstein may have believed in 1905, he
apparently came to agree that what he had discovered was spacetime.
(See </span></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/Putnama.html"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US"><u>Einstein</u></span></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">
1966, pp. 205-8). </span></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Scientific
realism is, however, a way of letting science determine one's
ontology. That is not the best way to decide which ontological theory
to accept, because the empirical method that science follows is to
infer to the best efficient-cause explanation, and that may not be
the best ontological-cause explanation. But we can see how realism
led to an ontology based on spacetime. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Einstein's
special theory of relativity was a better efficient-cause explanation
of the relevant phenomena than Lorentz's way of defending his
transformation equations, because it made all the same precise
predictions of measurements, but in a mathematically simpler way. As
an efficient-cause explanation, however, all that Einstein's special
theory requires is an <i>empirical equivalence</i> of inertial
reference frames. It assumes that inertial frames are experimentally
indistinguishable from one another, and it derives a description
about how they must appear to one another as parts of the same world
(where Maxwell's laws of electromagnetism hold). That relationship is
described by the Lorentz equations for transforming their coordinates
into one another, and it is represented by Minkowski's spacetime
diagram. But Einstein's was a mathematical argument, and no mechanism
or cause of the empirical equivalence was given. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">A realist
interpretation of special relativity goes beyond mere <i>empirical
equivalence </i>and holds that inertial frames are all <i>ontologically
equivalent</i>. If special relativity is the literal and deepest
truth about the world, then what observers on all possible inertial
reference frames believe must be true at the same time. That is to
hold, not merely that no experiment can distinguish any one inertial
frame from all the others as the absolute frame, but that there is
nothing about the nature of any inertial frame that makes it stand
out from all the others. That means, among other things, that no
assertion made by observers on one inertial frame can be true unless
the same kind of assertion made by observers on every other inertial
frame is also true. (Nor can any assertion made on one inertial frame
be false unless the same kind of assertion made on every other
inertial frame is also false.) </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The virtue
of Minkowski's spacetime diagram is that it enables us to &quot;picture&quot;
what exists in a world where inertial reference frames are all
<i>ontologically equivalent</i>. Though it may still be unclear what
spacetime is, Minkowski's diagram does allow us to believe that all
possible reference frames are related to what exists in the same way,
for it accommodates all possible standards of simultaneity at a
distance. But they can all correspond to what exists only if the
world is a four-dimensional entity all of whose parts in both space
and time exist in the same way. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">It is clear
that this <i>ontological equivalence </i>of inertial frames is
incompatible with absolute space and time, because if space and time
were absolute, one inertial frame would be singled out ontologically
from all possible inertial frames. Only one of all possible inertial
frames would have the correct standard of simultaneity. Its location
in space and time could be shared by observers on many other inertial
frames, but none of their claims about which distant events are
simultaneous with their shared here and how would correspond to what
exists. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Einsteinians
do not use the term &quot;ontological equivalence&quot; to describe
the relationship between different inertial reference frames, but
that is what the belief in spacetime comes to. Most philosophers of
space and time simply take it for granted that they must accept
&quot;substantivalism&quot; about spacetime in order to interpret the
special theory as a description of the real nature of what exists. <sup><a class="sdfootnoteanc" name="sdfootnote8anc" href="#sdfootnote8sym"><sup>8</sup></a></sup></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">To
believe in spacetime is to accept an ontology that is fundamentally
different from Lorentz's Newtonian view, and the difference can be
seen in what each implies about the nature of material objects. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Newtonian
physicists assumed that material objects are substances that endure
through time. They had to believe in absolute time, because the
endurance theory of substances presupposes that only the present
exists, or &quot;presentism.&quot; (If the world is everything that
exists, then objects that exist at only one moment in their histories
must exist at the same time, for otherwise they would not be parts of
the same world.) And since Newtonian physicists believed that
material objects are all related to one another by (consistent)
spatial relations, they were also forced to believe in absolute
space. In a natural world, absolute time entails absolute space.
Hence, the Newtonian world was made up of material objects in three
dimensional space that endured through time. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Spacetime,
on the other hand, is a four-dimensional entity. What exists is
spacetime and all the events that are located in spacetime. Since
time is an aspect of its essential structure, a spacetime world
cannot endure through time. Thus, spacetime points and spacetime
events must all exist in the same way independently of one another,
if they exist at all. There are no material objects in a spacetime
world, at least, not in the way that Lorentz believed. There are only
the spacetime events that seem to make up the histories of so-called
material objects. Thus, what is ordinarily called a &quot;material
object&quot; is just a continuous series of spacetime events in
spacetime. Its real nature is represented accurately by a “world
line” in a spacetime diagram, because each spacetime event making
up the history of a &quot;material object&quot; has an existence that
is distinct from all the others, just as one point on a line exists
distinctly from every other point on the line. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In short,
whereas a material object in a Newtonian world exists only at each
moment as it is present, but is identical across time, a so-called
material object in a spacetime world is a continuous series of
spacetime events, each of which exists eternally as a distinct part
of the world. This is the difference between the endurance and
perdurance theory of substances, and between the presentist and
eternalist theory about time and existence. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Scientific
realists sometimes assume that they can believe that Einstein's
special theory of relativity corresponds to what exists without
denying that they are themselves substances that endure through time
by holding that only objects at a distance from themselves must exist
the same way at all different moments in their histories. But that is
not possible, if they believe that the truth of Einstein's special
theory means that it corresponds to what exists for every observer.
If Einstein's theory is universally true, then it must be true for
inertial observers located elsewhere in the universe, and the only
way that different inertial observes at a distance from us can all be
correct about which moment in our local history is simultaneous with
their passing by one another is if the moments in our local history
all exist in the same way. We must perdure, rather than endure,
because we are material objects at a distance for inertial observers
elsewhere in the universe. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">What
Minkowski's “union” of space and time means ontologically is,
therefore, that presentism is false. The denial of presentism is such
a serious obstacle to an ontological explanation of the world that,
in <font face="Arial, sans-serif">Spatiomaterialism</font>, we were
led to reject spacetime substantivalism (or &quot;spatiotemporalism&quot;),
promising to justify it later by showing how it is possible for space
and time to be absolute, despite the Einsteinian revolution. That is
the argument we take up in the next section. But first, let us
consider briefly why physics has ignored the ontological problems
with eternalism. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">What
explains the ascendancy of the belief in spacetime is, once again,
the empirical method of science and the physicists' addiction to
mathematics as a means of practicing it. Behind Minkowski's spacetime
diagram lies an elegant equation that has proved to be irresistibly
attractive. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Minkowski
provided a method of constructing in our own spacetime coordinate
frame the spacetime coordinate frame that would be used by observers
on an object moving relative to us. We may call their world-line the
“moving timeline” (<i>t = x/v</i>), because it will be the time
axis that moving observers use for their spacetime coordinate frame. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
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" name="Minkowski" align="bottom" width="420" height="330" border="0"></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Minkowski
formulated the conclusion of Einsteins special theory as an
equation that describes a hyperboloid in four dimensional spacetime:
<i>1</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>=&nbsp;c</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup><i>t</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>- x</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>- y</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>- z</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup><font face="Uncial, Times New Roman, serif"><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>.
</i></font></font>(When we orient our x-axis in the direction of the
others motion, we can ignore the other two dimensions and it
reduces to <i>1</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>= c</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup><i>t</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>- x</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>.)
(It is the red curve in the diagram depicting how Minkowski's
spacetime diagram is constructed.) The intersection of Minkowskis
hyperboloid curve with our time-axis is the unit of time in our frame
(<i>t = 1</i>), and the unit of distance (in “basic units”) is
the distance in our frame that light travels during that period of
time (<i>x = 1</i>). The moving timeline (the time-axis of the moving
spacetime frame) also intersects the curve described by Minkowskis
equation, and the distance of that point along our time-axis is the
length of a unit of time on the moving coordinate frame according to
our clocks. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">As the
diagram shows, moving clocks are slowed down in our frame. The other
axis of the moving spacetime frame, the “moving space-line”, is
also deduced from Minkowskis equation. Moving space-lines all have
the same slope as the tangent to Minkowskis curve at the point of
the moving timelines intersection with his curve. (Its slope is
<i>v/c</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>;
the points on any line with this slope are simultaneous in the moving
spacetime frame.) Finally, the unit of distance on the moving
space-line is how far light travels in the moving frame during a unit
of time on the moving frame. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Inertial
frames are all equivalent on Minkowskis theory, as on Einsteins,
since Minkowskis equation determines precisely the same hyperbola
in every moving inertial frame constructed this way in our own
spacetime coordinate frame. That is, their hyperbolas all coincide.
In particular, the same procedure <i>on the moving coordinate </i>frame,
using the same equation (and taking the velocity to be <i>-v</i>
along the x'-axis), produces the original coordinate frame. Or more
abstractly, Minkowskis equation can be generalized as a measure,
<i>s</i>, of the separation between any two events that is the same
in every inertial frame, despite variations in their coordinates for
particular events: <i>s</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>= c</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup><i>t</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>- x</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>- y</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>- z</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>.
</font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In
Minkowskis equation, the parallel between the representation of
space and time is remarkable. Time would be just another spatial
dimension, except that it lacks a minus sign (and needs the velocity
of light, <i>c</i>, to make units of time commensurable with
distance). Indeed, that is how Minkowski includes relativistic mass
increase. His equationss form can be used to state the <i>laws of
nature </i>that hold true in every inertial frame. In “four vector
physics”, or “covariant” formulations of laws of physics, the
energy of an object, <i>E</i>, takes the place of time and the three
dimensions of momentum, <i>p</i>, take the place of the three spatial
dimensions, so that the objects rest mass, <i>m</i><sub><i>0</i></sub>,
rather than the separation, is what is the same about the object in
all inertial frames: <i>m</i><sub><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>o</i></font></sub><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup><i>c</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>4&nbsp;</i></font></sup><i>=&nbsp;E</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2&nbsp;</i></font></sup><i>-&nbsp;p</i><sub><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>x</i></font></sub><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup><i>c</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>- p</i><sub><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>y</i></font></sub><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup><i>c</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>
<i>- p</i><sub><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>z</i></font></sub><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup><i>c</i><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><i>2</i></font></sup>.
The mathematics of four vector physics is so elegant and suggestive
about the relationship of energy and momentum that it is not
surprising that physicists now find themselves committed to the
belief in spacetime. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">By
comparison with Lorentzs ad hoc attempts to patch up classical
physics in the wake of the Michelson-Morley experiment, Einsteins
argument was astonishingly simple and elegant, making it seem that
Einstein had a deeper insight into these phenomena. And since
Minkowski provided a diagram that made it possible to represent what
special relativity implies about the world independently of
particular reference frames, it is hardly surprising that the belief
in spacetime has become the orthodox ontology in physics and the
philosophy of science. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
acceptance of Einsteins special theory of relativity involved,
however, a remarkable change in the empirical method of physics, for
it involved the abandonment of the requirement that explanations in
physics be intuitively intelligible. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">To follow
the empirical method is to infer to the best efficient-cause
explanation. Even in classical physics, theories were highly
mathematical and confirmation was most convincing when they predicted
surprising, quantitatively precise measurements. But since classical
physicists still believed in absolute space and time, they also
expected the best scientific theories to be intuitively intelligible,
in the sense that it was possible to think coherently about what was
happening in spatial imagination. But intuitive intelligibility was
no longer possible when the best scientific theory required giving up
the belief in absolute space and time. That was undeniably a loss,
but physicists felt that they had to grow up and recognize that their
deepest commitment was to judging the best theory by which is the
simplest and most complete prediction of measurements. Since this
came from mathematical theories, abandoning the requirement that
physical explanations be intuitively intelligible left them addicted
to mathematics. </font></font>
</p>
<div id="sdfootnote1">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.25cm">
<a class="sdfootnotesym" name="sdfootnote1sym" href="#sdfootnote1anc">1</a>
This is because the velocity of light relative to the object in
motion is different in opposite directions, and going one way the
whole distance at the lower (relative) velocity takes more extra
time than it can make up coming back over the same distance at the
higher (relative) velocity. Though the path back and forth is
spatially symmetric, the effect of the velocity of light relative to
the frame on the time of travel accumulates per unit time, and so
the signal loses more time than it gains.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote2">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.25cm">
<a class="sdfootnotesym" name="sdfootnote2sym" href="#sdfootnote2anc">2</a><span lang="en-US">
The equation was </span><span lang="en-US"><i>L=L</i></span><sub><span lang="en-US"><i>o<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="StrEqBeta" align="bottom" width="46" height="18" border="0"></i></span></sub><span lang="en-US">,
where </span><span lang="en-US"><i>L</i></span><sub><span lang="en-US"><i>o</i></span></sub><span lang="en-US">
was the length at absolute rest. The shrinkage had been proposed
independently by George F. Fitzgerald in 1889 and hence became known
as the “Lorentz-Fitzgerald contraction”. Relevant portions of
Lorentzs 1985 monograph and 1904 theory are reprinted in </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Lorentza"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Lorentz</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">,
</span><span lang="en-US"><i>et al</i></span><span lang="en-US">,
(1923, pp. 3-84).</span></p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote3">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.25cm">
<a class="sdfootnotesym" name="sdfootnote3sym" href="#sdfootnote3anc">3</a><span lang="en-US">
See Stanley </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldbergc"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Goldberg</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">
(1984, p. 98) and Roberto </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Torettic"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Torretti</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">
(1983, pp. 45-6). Hereafter, these works are referred to as
“Goldberg” or “Torretti”, with page numbers. “Holton”
refers to </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldbergc"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Holton</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">
(1973). “Zahar” refers to </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldbergc"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Zahar</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">
(1989). </span>
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote4">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.25cm">
<a class="sdfootnotesym" name="sdfootnote4sym" href="#sdfootnote4anc">4</a><span lang="en-US">
The discovery of the Lorentz distortions was complicated by the fact
that there are other effects of absolute motion on material objects,
besides those that are directly related to the Michelson-Morley
experiment. These are the “first-order” effects of motion in
space (which vary as </span><span lang="en-US"><i>v/c</i></span><span lang="en-US">,
rather than as </span><span lang="en-US"><i>v</i></span><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><span lang="en-US"><i>2</i></span></font></sup><span lang="en-US"><i>/c</i></span><sup><font size="1" style="font-size: 8pt"><span lang="en-US"><i>2</i></span></font></sup><span lang="en-US">,
or “second order” effects), such as the way telescopes must be
inclined slightly in the direction of motion in order to intercept
light from overhead stars (much as umbrellas must be inclined
slightly forward in walking through rain to keep raindrops from
hitting ones body). First order effects (including the effects on
the index of refraction) had previously been explained by the “ether
drag” hypothesis (that the motion of material objects drags the
ether along with them), but Lorentz abandoned it . Lorentzs
explanation of length contraction assumed that the ether is totally
unaffected by the motion of material objects through it, and he had
no explanation of such first order effects except to state
transformation equations by which one could obtain the coordinates
used on the moving object from those used at absolute rest.
</span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldberc"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Goldberg</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">,
pp. 88-92; </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldbergc"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Torretti</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">,
pp. 41-45</span></p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote5">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.25cm">
<a class="sdfootnotesym" name="sdfootnote5sym" href="#sdfootnote5anc">5</a><span lang="en-US">
</span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldbergc"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Zahar</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">
(1989), p. 99; </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldbergc"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Holton</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">
(1973, pp. 175-178).</span></p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote6">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.25cm">
<a class="sdfootnotesym" name="sdfootnote6sym" href="#sdfootnote6anc">6</a><span lang="en-US">
</span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldbergc"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Prokhovnik</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">
(1985, Appendix 2) argues that in the original formulation of his
argument, Einstein was actually assuming the existence of a
stationary coordinate frame.</span></p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote7">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.25cm">
<a class="sdfootnotesym" name="sdfootnote7sym" href="#sdfootnote7anc">7</a><span lang="en-US">
H. </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Goldbergc"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Minkowski</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">,
“Space and Time”, reprinted in Lorentz, </span><span lang="en-US"><i>et
al,</i></span><span lang="en-US"> </span><span lang="en-US"><i>The
Principle of Relativity</i></span><span lang="en-US">, pp. 75-91. </span>
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdfootnote8">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western" style="margin-top: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.25cm">
<a class="sdfootnotesym" name="sdfootnote8sym" href="#sdfootnote8anc">8</a><sup><span lang="en-US">
</span></sup><span lang="en-US">See, for example, M. </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Putnama"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Friedman</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">
(1983), J. </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Putnama"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>Earman</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">
(1989), and </span><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Putnama"><font color="#0000ff"><span lang="en-US"><u>J.
R. Lucas and P. E. Hodgson</u></span></font></a><span lang="en-US">
(1990). </span>
</p>
</div>
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