Regardless of the terminology used, I think that it’s obvious that the closer and more immediate that a thing is observed the more accurately the observation is likely to represent the reality. I believe that every thing only has one reality. I'm not making a claim, I'm asking a question. Why is is an observation that has been distorted by distance and motion claimed to be an accurate representation of the reality of the thing being observed?
All right. Try to imagine two Perfect Clocks
(tm) that were manufactured one day by the Perfect Clock Company, Switzerland. They were sitting on the shelf together, clocking away happily and took joy and pride in comparing each other's time and always finding it the same. Why wouldn't they? They were both Perfect Clocks
(tm). When they ticked, their sounds perfectly merged together into one single ticking sound.
Then one day, an astronaut came and purchased one of the clocks, to take it with him on his trip to ISS where he would stay for a year. The clocks were very sad that they had to part ways, but they had no choice. The clock that stayed said to the purchased one, "Don't you worry. One thing we know for sure is that we're both Perfect Clocks
(tm). So whenever you get lonely out there, just check your time and think of me with fond thoughts, for you'll know that I'll be showing the same time at that very same moment." That cheered them up (clocks are easily amused) and the astronaut left.
One year later, the astronaut's wife came to the store and purchased the other clock. She came home and put her new purchase on the kitchen table, just next to the clock that her husband brought back from space the previous day. The clocks were of course very happy and the first thing they could think of was, as one might expect, to compare times. (Clocks can sometimes be awfully narrow-minded.) But this time, there wasn't much rejoicing.
"Hey, you're time is wrong!" said the Earth-staying clock. "Did someone adjust you? Or did you just lose track of correct time?"
"Of course not," said the ISS-staying clock, gravely offended at such an insult. "My time is correct, it's yours that's wrong. You should give up your brand and call yourself the Lousiest Clock in the World
(tm)."
"Now, now, wait a minute. Maybe this isn't our fault. I remember that I heard something about relativity and time dilation. Couldn't that explain it?"
"No, I don't think so. I heard about that too, but that just speaks about
observing something from a different moving frame. Observation can't matter, what matters is what's real. I believe that every thing only has one reality. Look, we're Perfect Clocks
(tm) (at least, I know
I am) and we are supposed to be perfectly correct in our own local frames."
"But you weren't! As far as I can tell, you were ticking wrong when you were orbiting the Earth."
"No, that was just your illusion, because you were observing me from a distant, moving frame. I was, in fact ticking perfectly correct the whole time. My reality didn't change by your observation of it. Look, from my point of view, it was you who were ticking wrong while I was up there."
"But I wasn't!"
"What I'm trying to say is that a remote observation doesn't matter. What's sure is that a Perfect Clock
(tm), manufactured to be that, remains a Perfect Clock
(tm) in its own frame, and
an observation that has been distorted by distance and motion cannot be claimed to be an accurate representation of the reality of the thing being observed."
The Earth-staying clock had to think about that for a while.
"I guess I understand what you mean. Just... one thing."
"Shoot."
"We are both original Perfect Clocks(tm), carefully manufactured to always remain correct as far as our own reality is concerned. And right now, we're sitting on this same table, and our observation of each other is distorted by neither distance nor motion. And yet... we're showing different times."
"Hmm. Interesting," said the other clock, and while they both thought about that, there was a long silence, disturbed only by two perfect clocks ticking in rapid successive pairs, slightly shifted and out of synchronization.