Using the imperative when making an argument is not good form. A detached voice is much more neutral in tone and much less hostile. "Consider the metric..." would be much more appropriate.
See those letters, like "t" and "r"? Those are called coordinates.
They are first and foremost variables. When one attaches the further meaning that each variable is part of a coordinate system by being a coordinate label, then one should say that t and r are not coordinates but that they are coordinate values or coordinate variables. Coordinates give a full specification for the location of a point. I do not see how "t" and "r" specify a point in 4D space-time for instance, therefore I disagree at this point that they are coordinates.
As for spacetime geometry, one can compute everything about it from the metric (plus any boundary conditions or identifications, if any). It's true that there are infinitely many other metrics that describe the same spacetime in different coordinates, but any one is enough to find the spacetime geometry.
For the record, here is the original quote:
The metric defines both the coordinates and the spacetime, and it lets you predict the results of all experiments.
With the metric one can in principle determine all geometry only related quantities from it, such as areas, volumes, test-particle paths, etc. There are lots of other things to predict experimentally that the metric alone would not give an answer for. Unless the context of "results of all experiments" is given to eliminate many experiments, the second part of the sentence above must be wrong.
A metric is a series functions that one can put into a square-shaped array. These functions are dependent upon a set of variables called coordinates. These coordinates can be thought of in various levels of abstraction related to how abstractly we are considering the functions.
One can either attach to each coordinate label a further meaning of how it is to be determined constructively speaking (take a ruler and a watch and then...), or not do so. If the set of coordinate labels is given this further meaning, it is a coordinate system. If one or more coordinate labels is not given a method for determination, such a system is an abstract coordinate system.
Since we are speaking about physics, unless one gives a constructive meaning to ones coordinates, there is no way to match up the coordinates with anything that might be measured because at least one of the "coordinates" will merely be a label.
There are also types of coordinate systems (not abstract coordinate systems as previously defined). A type of coordinate system is a common method of determining coordinates that does not take into consideration where the coordinate system will be used. Examples include polar, cylindrical, etc. etc.
If we take a particular coordinate system type and apply it about some point then there are many possibilities for what can be considered. Experimentally one could use the coordinate system to determine the metric, speed of some craft, etc. etc. Theoretically one could make some prediction that could subsequently be tested.
On a final note, abstract coordinates are good for stating laws of nature since they do not specify how coordinates are determined, they are free of dependence on any type of coordinate system. The first part of the sentence above ("The metric defines both the coordinates and the spacetime,") I still find troubling, even with the context as given below.
You can have a metric in terms of abstract or concrete coordinates. If one has the metric in terms of abstract coordinates, then there is no way of visualizing what an expression with a bunch of coordinate variables means observationally. If the metric is in terms of a concrete coordinate system (as it is in Schw. Sol. as per Schwarzschild Coordinates), then a specific metric is determined by both what coordinate system one is using and what the geometry is.
Case in point.
ds
2 = dx
2 + x
2 dy
2.
It is only convention that makes one think that x and y in the above case are Cartesian. To be safe though, until this is specified, the x and y are merely abstract labels. If I say that x and y are determined the same way as r and theta are in polar coordinates, then you would know what the geometry would be like. If on the other hand I were to say that x and y are Cartesian, then the geometry would be different than plane Euclidean.
The point is, the form of the metric is determined by the type of coordinate system used and the geometry present in a given patch of space where that coordinate system is employed. Conversely however, if one has the metric and what the coordinate system the metric is given in, then one can use that to help in understanding the geometry.
The metric helping to understanding the geometry is not the same as the metric determining the geometry. The geometry is independent of what coordinate system you put on it. In terms of functions the metric (in terms of the context given thus far) is dependent on what the geometry is
and what coordinate system you use.
That's kind of true (although we're not "locally speaking", we're talking about the full spacetime), but it doesn't contradict anything I said - particularly if you don't rip it out of context.
Again, context. We were discussing experiments with light and clocks in spacetimes that are vacuum solutions to Einstein's equations.
Thank you for providing context in this case. I hope you will agree the statement I quoted originally by itself is most definitely wrong, as I agree that in the context just given, since there are no other fields to consider, the metric suffices to determine all of the experimental outcomes (as far as I know), within such a context.
A note on "locally", I included it without knowing the context to cover my bases. In general, coordinates are usually not global except in very simple cases (such as in the Schw. Sol.).