Looks like we have another Electric Sun thread brewing, though it has a long way to go before its magnitude is anything like that one.
Yep. As in the Electric Sun thread, the iconoclast is denying the relevance of mathematics even as he occasionally claims to be the only one who's doing the math correctly.
Surely you're not going to hide behind calculations
You're advancing specious pseudoscience that says it is, and taking cover behind mathematics.
What happens on a forum like this is that some self-professed "expert" feeds you guys hogwash.
Farsight is the self-professed "expert" who's feeding us hogwash.
When I come along with scientific evidence and a sound argument to challenge the hogwash, the fallback position is "you don't understand the mathematics". It's bull. Don't fall for it.
I'm sorry, but the problem with
Farsight's argument is that he really doesn't understand the mathematics.
Although
Farsight often says coordinates don't really exist, he founded his argument upon a meaningless coordinate singularity that occurs in one particular coordinate system (Schwarzschild coordinates), which
Farsight implicitly assumes to be canonical even as he claims not to have assumed any particular coordinate system.
Consider, for example,
Farsight's
"$64,000 question" about the coordinate speed of light at the event horizon, according to observers at a great distance.
Farsight thinks that speed of light is zero, but I've done the calculation myself and gotten a different answer: unity.
Does that contradict
Farsight's belief that the coordinate speed of light is zero at the event horizon? No, because
Farsight and I are distant observers who have chosen to use different coordinate systems.
Both of our coordinate systems are equally correct, and both
describe exactly the same spacetime manifold.
Farsight doesn't understand that, because he hasn't done his homework. We've already been through this on another thread, but it's even more on-topic for this thread so we might as well continue that discussion here.
General relativity is a difficult subject. Once upon a time, people like Lemaître published research papers about the very matters we're discussing.
It's okay to make beginner's mistakes when you're first learning a difficult subject. No one expects an amateur or student to get everything right.
It's also okay to give up on a difficult subject when you discover you just don't have the mathematical and/or scientific background required to understand it. Life is short. You can't learn everything.
It's not okay to pretend to understand a difficult subject while making beginner's mistakes and ignoring expert correction. That pretense and willful ignorance is what distinguishes cranks and crackpots from students and amateurs.