"Alfonso" wrote in message news:Y9SdnQFoZsqdnyPN...@bt.com...
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No this is not a debate about Dingle or Essen or Murray or Builder,
but about your SICK philosophy.
No so much for your integrity.
> Einstein did not use the term (or imply) "inertial", and if you do
> then it's your Aunt Sally or straw man you are knocking over to
> no advantage or purpose.
OK in 1905 he used the unsatisfactory term "stationary system".
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No it is very satisfactory, far more so than your unsatisfactory
"absolute" FoR in which you claim rotation is "absolute".
In
what way does an inertial FoR differ from what he described as a
stationary system?
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"Let us take a system of co-ordinates in which the equations of Newtonian
mechanics hold good. In order to render our presentation more precise and to
distinguish this system of co-ordinates verbally from others which will be
introduced hereafter, we call it the “stationary system.” -- Einstein
No in what way does an inertial FoR differ from what Einstein described as a
system of co-ordinates in which the equations of Newtonian mechanics hold
good?
No in what way does two differ from zwei?
No in what way does zwei differ from deux?
No in what way does deux differ from 2?
No in what way does "moving system" differ from "stationary system"?
No if you don't read what Einstein wrote you are not qualified to criticise
what he wrote.
No this is not a debate about Dingle or Essen or Murray or Builder, but
about your SICK philosophy.
No "stationary system" is very satisfactory, far more so than your
unsatisfactory "absolute" FoR in which you claim rotation is "absolute".
The subject relates to SR as it exists today.
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No in what way does "the subject as it exists today" differ from SR as
Einstein wrote it?
No leave Einstein out of "the subject as to exists today" and only discuss
"the subject as it exists today".
No first tell us who wrote "the subject as it exists today", but remember
you are not discussing SR.
No so much for your integrity.
If you want to argue against Einstein
> then do so without putting someone else's words in his mouth.
> Einstein did not use the term "Lorentz contraction" although some
> leeway can be allowed for "shortening",
Can you suggest a difference between contraction and shortening?
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Can you suggest a difference between 1 multiplied by 0.5 and 1 divided by
0.5?
Let's be quite clear. Einstein was a babbling idiot and if you agree with
his
babble then SO ARE YOU!
which he did use in
> direct contradiction to his transformation equation for lengthening,
> xi = (x-vt) / sqrt(1-v^2/c^2)
> eta = y
> zeta = z
> By agreeing to use the term "contraction" you are again putting
> someone else's words into his mouth and attacking another Aunt
> Sally.
I can't find the reference but (I think it was Essen) pointed out that
he got it wrong.
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Well I can find the reference and I did it without Essen for a crutch, and
of course the babbling idiot Einstein got it wrong.
The reference is in
§ 4. Physical Meaning of the Equations Obtained in Respect to Moving Rigid
Bodies and Moving Clocks
in
ON THE ELECTRODYNAMICS
OF MOVING BODIES
By A. Einstein
which ANYONE with out a lame brain can read without Essen to do it for them.
In a later paper he had another go and got it right.
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No he didn't. So much for your integrity.
"Thus, whereas the Y and Z dimensions of the sphere (and therefore of every
rigid body of no matter what form) do not appear modified by the motion, the
X dimension appears shortened in the ratio 1:sqrt(1-v^2/c^2), i.e. the
greater the value of v, the greater the shortening." -- Einstein.
Same paper.
He wrote that to agree with Lorentz, but the ratio 1:sqrt(1-v^2/c^2) is
1/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2), the greater the value of v, the greater the LENGTHENING.
He concealed the error in part in the corrected version by interchanging
his definitions of X and X'
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Cite it. So much for your integrity.
> What Einstein should have said is irrelevant,
It depends on whether you are attacking his theory (corrected) or his
mathematical ability. He made a mathematical error which was rather
remiss of him especially as he knew the answer he was trying to get.
There are more elegant ways of deriving the transforms from his
postulates which are taught today.
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Take a tip from the moslems.
There is no Physics but SR and Einstein is its Prophet.
Every time you babble "contraction" you are agreeing with a babbling idiot.
we can only discuss
> what he DID say
Why?
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That has to be the fucking dumbest question anyone ever asked.
To get it right, that's why! Your brain is contracted.