As I said before, maybe you are thinking something similar to Mach's principle, which says roughly (and the 'roughly' is the important part):
The inertia of a system is caused by its interaction with the rest of the universe, i.e., every particle in the universe eventually has an effect on every other particle.
According to Mach, if there were a single object in the universe, it would be impossible to determine whether it was rotating.
Einstein was inspired by these ideas when he developed GR, but the theory turned out to be quite anti-Mach. If we have an universe with a rotating bucket of water (Newton's thought experiment) it would feel centrifugal forces, even if it were otherwise completely empty (according to GR).
The real problem with Mach's principle is that it is so vague as to be be meaningless. You could try for a more precise formulation, but until you translate it to mathematical terms it means nothing. And translating it is not an easy problem. For the initiate, one book that discusses this is Gravitation and Inertia, by Ciufolini & Wheeer.
You say, if the universe is otherwise completely empty and we can see no stars, what is the room rotating with respect to[FONT=Courier, Monospaced]? [/FONT]The answer is that it is rotating with respect to the metric of spacetime. If you don't think that the metric is a 'real' concept, like a star, walk into a black hole... They are nothing but pure metric, no matter.
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The inertia of a system is caused by its interaction with the rest of the universe, i.e., every particle in the universe eventually has an effect on every other particle.
According to Mach, if there were a single object in the universe, it would be impossible to determine whether it was rotating.
Einstein was inspired by these ideas when he developed GR, but the theory turned out to be quite anti-Mach. If we have an universe with a rotating bucket of water (Newton's thought experiment) it would feel centrifugal forces, even if it were otherwise completely empty (according to GR).
The real problem with Mach's principle is that it is so vague as to be be meaningless. You could try for a more precise formulation, but until you translate it to mathematical terms it means nothing. And translating it is not an easy problem. For the initiate, one book that discusses this is Gravitation and Inertia, by Ciufolini & Wheeer.
davefoc said:OK, but my question goes to why there should be a special non-rotating frame at all if the space you are floating in consists of a complete nothingness that is incapable of interacting at all with your ship.
You say, if the universe is otherwise completely empty and we can see no stars, what is the room rotating with respect to[FONT=Courier, Monospaced]? [/FONT]The answer is that it is rotating with respect to the metric of spacetime. If you don't think that the metric is a 'real' concept, like a star, walk into a black hole... They are nothing but pure metric, no matter.
[FONT=Courier, Monospaced]
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