I'm not wrong about the speed of light varying with gravitational potential, which is what Einstein said repeatedly whilst formulating GR. We can see it.
We can indeed, given a specific set of coordinates and performing our experiments in specific ways. Nobody ever said otherwise.
And yet he presented it as a fait accompli without explanation
Not at all. He gave a thorough explanation. You just couldn't follow it, because you can't do the math. You seem to think that with the right conceptual framework, the math becomes irrelevant. But that's simply not true. You can't construct the right conceptual framework
without the math.
and there's still no explanation of what [latex]$ds^2 = -(r-r_0) dt^2 + dr^2/(r-r_0) + dy^2 + dz^2$[/latex] represents.
Also not true. It's been explained to you multiple times. It's flat space-time, the
same flat space-time that the canonical Minkowski metric describes. We can pick different coordinates to describe flat space-time, and this is just one set of coordinates. What else do you want to know? Do you need an equation to describe how to get from the more conventional coordinates to these ones? I don't recall you asking, but if you had a clue about GR you could find the transforms yourself, and even if we gave them to you, you probably wouldn't know what to do with them.
This is getting laughable. It's like priests in a corner desperately spouting Latin.
That's how you think of math, isn't it? It's just Latin: incomprehensible and irrelevant gibberish, as far as you're concerned.
And it is academic, because light doesn't curve in flat spacetime.
How do you define "curve"? If you mean that light always follows a geodesic (in a vacuum), then that's true no matter what spacetime you're in. If you define "curve" in terms of how it relates to your coordinate system, then whether or not light curves depends on what you choose for that coordinate system. But of course, this is a
mathematical question, and you're allergic to those.
You can't create a gravitational field in space by moving through that space. If it isn't there, it isn't there.
That wasn't what you said. You said, "Things don't fall down as you pass by." And you said this in regards to the use of an accelerating reference frame. But you're rather obviously wrong. If you're accelerating, then
everything in the universe is falling down in your reference frame, where down is the direction opposite to your acceleration. You don't want to call it gravity. Fine, that's a semantic issue. The math, however, is not. But of course, math is what you're allergic to.
Yeah yeah, dismiss Einstein.
I haven't dismissed anything Einstein has said. But what he says with words is often ambiguous, because that's a fundamental problem with human language. It is imprecise. But his math does not suffer this weakness. Furthermore, math is what makes his theory quantifiable and testable. The words can help explain the math, but at the end of the day, it is the math which actually matters.
And you have done nothing
but dismiss Einstein's math. Because it's so far beyond your capacity that it's like Latin to you. And so you lash out at people who understand the math, and can use the math, because they don't agree with you. But the people who can do the math, and who use it correctly, are in far better agreement with Einstein than the person who doesn't have a clue how any of that math works.
I'm objecting to the lack of explanation of terms and scenario.
Meaning you want someone to hold your hand and present you with a coordinate transform. Because you can't figure it out yourself.
And I'm the one who said you don't change space by zooming through it. Those light beams don't curve. Look, there's Zig zooming through space, riding his negative carpet. And oh wait, he's zooming past a light beam. See it curve? Er, no.
Same thing happens if you bound a light beam around while falling in a gravitational field. You will perceive the light beam as being straight. Someone stationary in the field will perceive it being curved. So what is it
really?
Well, let's start by defining what it
means to be curved.