Seems we have both been digging around the net at the same time Michael. I've just come back from my latest explorations and have found your latest post above. Thanks. You might be interested in reading another thread starting with this post, with the topic "Weight and reference frame".
Also, more from John Denker in another interesting post:
I would say that "weight" has no clear definition, rather than "real weight".Michael_C said:This illustrates exactly my point: the term "real weight" has no clear definition. If we are to talk of weight at all, the only really clear definition I can imagine must include the frame of reference.
Also, more from John Denker in another interesting post:
andJohn S. Denker at carnot.physics.buffalo.edu/archives/2000/09_2000/msg00189.html said:I agree with your observation that there is an element of arbitrariness
here. The arbitrariness is real. Some of the arbitrariness is inescapable.
In mathematics the situation is more clear:
-- there are undefined (and undefinable) terms such as points, lines,
and planes
-- there are axioms that assign (with considerably arbitrariness) the
properties of the above, and then
-- there are theorems which are derived from the axioms.
To return to the world of physics, the term "force" starts out as an
abstraction, essentially as abstract as a mathematician's "point", until it
is given meaning -- implicitly -- by being used in the laws of motion.
Alas the physics situation is messier than the math situation, because
physicists have not been careful to distinguish what are the terms, the
axioms, and the theorems. Many of the things that you would need to say in
order to axiomatize the notion of "force" are left unsaid in the usual
formulation of Newton's laws -- notably the fact that forces are vectors,
and obey the vector laws when you superpose them, rotate them, et cetera.
I read that and thought, yep, this thread here (with humber, etc) is a bit like the wreckage of a big geodesic dome...John S. Denker at carnot.physics.buffalo.edu/archives/2000/09_2000/msg00189.html said:As far as I can tell, of all the laws of physics, there is not a single one
that means anything _by itself_. It's like a big geodesic dome; any
single strut, out of context, is structurally unsound and would fall down
immediately.