I wonder if any other reader finds this, er, surreal ...
W.D.Clinger said:
It isn't about believing Einstein. It's about understanding Einstein, working through the mathematical consequences of his theory of general relativity, and comparing those mathematical consequences to experiment.
No it isn't about
believing Einstein. Yes it is about
understanding Einstein.
Surreal, Part One:
Farsight claims to understand Einstein.
Thousands of others think they, too, understand Einstein. Including Wald, MTW, Will, sol, Zig, edd, W.D.Clinger, ctamblyn, ...
Many of these others do not understand Farsight's explanations of his understanding of Einstein, much less agree with it.
Farsight, apparently, has not been successful in explaining his understanding of Einstein to anyone else, in over five years (?) of trying.
Despite his many hundred (thousand?) posts, and many years of trying - without any success - Farsight continues to claim that he understands Einstein.
Surreal, no?
And to do that you don't dismiss what he said and ignore the evidence you can see with your own eyes
Surreal, Part Two.
What is this "
evidence you can see with your own eyes"? Why it's the quantitative results of experiments and observations done to test GR!
Does anyone ignore any such evidence? Why, no, they don't.
Surreal, no?
because you've been spoon-fed a general relativity that contradicts what the guy said.
Surreal, Part Three.
The "
general relativity" those thousands of others use, to derive the predictions that can be assessed using the quantitative results of experiments and observations done to test "
general relativity", come from "
what the guy said". Those derivations are available for anyone - including Farsight - to read, critique, apply, etc.
Yet there is no contradiction between theory and experiment.
Surreal, no?
Well, in this case, it may not be, not entirely.
Suppose "
what the guy said" contains some contradictions, or ambiguities, or inconsistencies. If so, then one could examine everything "
the guy said" and see if any of it leads to different predictions with regard to any of the experimental and observational tests that have been done. Or any that could be done, even if only in principle.
If it turns out that nothing "
the guy said" leads to any such tested, or testable, empirical difference, then in what sense could those contradictions, or ambiguities, or inconsistencies be said to be relevant (other than, perhaps, to a philosopher, or a science historian)?