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Would Religion still continue if....

Was Grandma lucky?

  • No, how can a heart attack be called lucky?

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Yes, she may have died without those cardiologists.

    Votes: 1 25.0%
  • On planet X, she would have had a spare heart anyway.

    Votes: 3 75.0%

  • Total voters
    4
MRC:
I'm sorry, but you are wrong. (To be perfectly honest: No, I'm not sorry, but you are still wrong).

If you try to compute the orbit of Mercury using only Newtonian mechanics, you DONT get the right answer. This puzzled astronomers for the better part of a century and led to the search for a planet inside the orbit of Mercury. It even got a name, Vulcan. Only after the discovery of Relativity, it was possible to calculate the orbit of Mercury and make it fit observations. For an easily readable and yet comprehensive description of this, I recommend Isaak Asimov's "The Planet That Wasn't" (Doubleday).

Newton works fine (here in this Universe). Go to the planet Mercury, and compute Mercury’s position while in orbit [around Mercury] using Newtonian mechanics – you’ll get the right answer

The Copenhagen Interpretation is about Quantum Mechanics, not Relativity.

Relativity is meaningless without the concept of Point of View (i.e. an Observer, i.e. as per Copenhagen). If there were no observers then what exactly would things be Relative to, pray tell?

And it doesn't say, as you seem to claim, that QM only functions when there is an observer. It says that any part of QM has to be proven empirically to be accepted true. Which also means that all accepted statements about QM have been proved empirically.

The Copenhagen Interpretation of QM (generally hated by A-Theists) clearly states that the waveform only collapses in the presence of an Observer!. In other words, reality doesn’t exist unless someone is looking.
 
Franko said:
Newton works fine (here in this Universe). Go to the planet Mercury, and compute Mercury’s position while in orbit [around Mercury] using Newtonian mechanics – you’ll get the right answer

Repeating your statement doesnt make it right. Mercury's orbit shows a progression not explainable by pure Newton physics. Obviously, your position while calculating it doesn't make any difference. Relaivity clears the problem by including the mass of the Sun's gravity.

Relativity is meaningless without the concept of Point of View (i.e. an Observer, i.e. as per Copenhagen). If there were no observers then what exactly would things be Relative to, pray tell?

Obviously function A can be relative to function B regardless if either is observed by anybody or not. If a tree falls in the forest and nobody listens, does it make a noise? Since we can often observe the effects of events that were not observed when they happened, this is really a silly notion.



The Copenhagen Interpretation of QM (generally hated by A-Theists) clearly states that the waveform only collapses in the presence of an Observer!. In other words, reality doesn’t exist unless someone is looking.

"Hated by A-Theists" is another of your strawmen, or lies. The Copenhagen Interpretation states, in short, that:

"There is no quantum world. There is only an abstract quantum description" (Herbert 1985, p. 17). This premise maintains that sensory observations are the only reality in physics, so that quantum theory--or any other theory in physics--cannot be extended beyond what can be directly observed."

The key words here are "CAN be observed", not IS observed. In other words, it must be observable, but of course it needs not be observed. More about the Copenhagen Interpretation here:

http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/CopenhagenInterpretation.html


Hans
 
MRC:
Repeating your statement doesnt make it right. Mercury's orbit shows a progression not explainable by pure Newton physics. Obviously, your position while calculating it doesn't make any difference. Relaivity clears the problem by including the mass of the Sun's gravity.

Yeah … here’s the thing, when you are in orbit around Mercury … YOU are also experiencing the Relativistic effects of the Sun’s Gravity (just like Mercury). Time and Distance will be dilated for you when compared with an observer on the Earth. Because of this effect your measurements will physically differ from an observer back on Earth, and because of this dilation your Newtonian calculations will produce the correct result.

A result that – back on Earth – would require General Relativity to reproduce.

Obviously function A can be relative to function B regardless if either is observed by anybody or not. If a tree falls in the forest and nobody listens, does it make a noise? Since we can often observe the effects of events that were not observed when they happened, this is really a silly notion.

Without commenting on Trees falling in the woods … how often are math equations calculated when no consciousness is around? Do trees and rocks even understand mathematics?

Relativity is about Time and Distance dilation. Are you telling me that something other than a consciousness would even be aware of such an effect? How?
 
Franko said:
Yeah … here’s the thing, when you are in orbit around Mercury … YOU are also experiencing the Relativistic effects of the Sun’s Gravity (just like Mercury). Time and Distance will be dilated for you when compared with an observer on the Earth. Because of this effect your measurements will physically differ from an observer back on Earth, and because of this dilation your Newtonian calculations will produce the correct result.

A result that – back on Earth – would require General Relativity to reproduce.

No. Sorry, but that is absolute nonsense. Any time-dilution experienced in orbit around Mercury would be as much influenced by your orbital motion as by Mercury's motion, and in any case insignificant. The realitivistic effects of the Sun's gravity do not create time-dilution. Finally, this obviously does not explain Mercury's progression as observed from Earth.

Without commenting on Trees falling in the woods … how often are math equations calculated when no consciousness is around? Do trees and rocks even understand mathematics?

Meaning what? Surely 2+2=4 whether somebody percieves it or not?

Relativity is about Time and Distance dilation. Are you telling me that something other than a consciousness would even be aware of such an effect? How?

Are you telling me that you think relativity only works on entities that are aware of it? Then you are whackier than I thought.

Hans
 
In addition to General Relativity, Einstein also developed the case of Special Relativity which asserts that the laws of physics are identical in all inertial frames. For this to be true, the speed of light cannot be different in different frames, even if those frames are in relative motion. This condition is met if the speed of light is a Universal constant. This finite communication time, which was not a component of Newton's description of gravity, allows for cause and effect relations which leads to the concept of Causality. Among many things, special relativity shows for objects moving at high velocity time runs slower, lengths become shorter and masses increase. This last effect can be understood through relativity as a relation between the increase of kinetic energy in one frame and a mass increase in another. This leads to the important principle of equivalence, E= mc2. The conditions of general relativity follow from those of special relativity but are applied to an accelerating frame (such as a gravitational potential). Hence inertial and gravitational forces are the same phenomenon and there is an identity between inertial masses as derived from Newton's laws of motion and gravitational masses which produce the force.

The basic prediction is that Newtonian gravity is very accurate when the gravitational field is weak (meaning that space is locally flat) but breaks down when the gravitational field is very strong (meaning space is locally curved). This was first manifested observationally when precision measures of the orbit of Mercury disagreed with Newtonian mechanics

But ONLY when measured from well outside the gravity field back on planet Earth! go to Mercury itself, and Space will seem just as "flat" as it did back on Earth ... Relative to You.

The resolution is provided by General Relativity. Mercury is sufficiently close to the Sun that it orbits in curved space and hence Newtonian mechanics provides an incomplete specification of its orbital parameters. The precession of the perihelion of Mercury's orbit and the bending of star light when it passes near the Sun are in excellent agreement with predictions from General Relativity and serve as its best verification.[
 
Doh! ... my bad!

I pulled that off a google search, but I don't know the site.
 
Franko said:
Doh! ... my bad!

I pulled that off a google search, but I don't know the site.
If you're using Internet Explorer, go into View --> Toolbars and make sure address bar is checked. That way the website address will appear at the top of your browser page.
 
Franko,

But ONLY when measured from well outside the gravity field back on planet Earth! go to Mercury itself, and Space will seem just as "flat" as it did back on Earth ... Relative to You.

This is false. The curvature of space is a local quantity, and can be measured (in principle) on an arbitrarily small distance scale (at least, until you get down to the quantum scale). It is nonzero both on Mercury and on Earth. It is just much easier to measure over large distance scales.

The curvature of space can be measured as follows. Take three points in space. Connect those points with straight lines (where a straight line is defined to be the shortest path connecting two points). You now have a triangle. Add up the angles. If they do not add up to 180 degrees (pi radians), then space is curved.

The average curvature over the triangle can then be calculated as the sum of the angles (in radians), minus pi, divided by the area of the triangle.

Although it is not obvious from the above, as we take the limit of the triangle's area going to zero, the average curvature does not go to zero. Instead, it approaches a finite limit, which is the local curvature.

Dr. Stupid
 
So what are you saying Stimp?

Relativity accounts for dilation, Newton doesn't --correct?

That was the difference between the two -- correct? If not, then why did everyone get so excited about Einstein?

So if the reason that Mercury is miscalculated from Earth is because of dilation, are you saying that a person in orbit around Mercury wouldn't also feel the effects of this same dilation?
 
Franko:
So what are you saying Stimp?

Relativity accounts for dilation, Newton doesn't --correct?

That was the difference between the two -- correct? If not, then why did everyone get so excited about Einstein?

So if the reason that Mercury is miscalculated from Earth is because of dilation, are you saying that a person in orbit around Mercury wouldn't also feel the effects of this same dilation?

That would apear to be his case.

The only reason I included relativity in my post was to point out that we have come a long way from newtonian physics, and that the emerging field of quantum physics, which according to the link I posted http://spot.colorado.edu/~vstenger/Quantum/qkids.html
shows, along with many others that quantum physics is in complete accord with all observed data. Furthermore, for reasons explained in the link, quantum physics show that individual reactions between particles are randomized.

Thus, as the nature of the universe is at a quantum level, random, fatalism cannot be true.

I posit this not because it is a dogmatically held belief, as you would have the world know, but because that is what all the evidence points too, as posted above.
 
Franko,

So what are you saying Stimp?

I thought that was clear. I am saying that what you stated is wrong.

Relativity accounts for dilation, Newton doesn't --correct?

That was the difference between the two -- correct? If not, then why did everyone get so excited about Einstein?

So if the reason that Mercury is miscalculated from Earth is because of dilation, are you saying that a person in orbit around Mercury wouldn't also feel the effects of this same dilation?

If someone living on Mercury were to use Newtonian mechanics to calculate its orbit, they would get a different answer than we get here on Earth (due to time dilation and length contraction). But the answer they get would still be wrong, even from their own frame of reference.

Why you think this is relevent is beyond me, though. Either way, Newtonian relativity is wrong. End of story.

Dr. Stupid
 
Franko:
Relativity accounts for dilation, Newton doesn't --correct?

That was the difference between the two -- correct? If not, then why did everyone get so excited about Einstein?

So if the reason that Mercury is miscalculated from Earth is because of dilation, are you saying that a person in orbit around Mercury wouldn't also feel the effects of this same dilation?

Stimpson:
If someone living on Mercury were to use Newtonian mechanics to calculate its orbit, they would get a different answer than we get here on Earth (due to time dilation and length contraction). But the answer they get would still be wrong, even from their own frame of reference.

So you are saying that General Relativity is accounting for some other factor than Time and Distance dilation?

Like what … specifically?
 
Franko,

So you are saying that General Relativity is accounting for some other factor than Time and Distance dilation?

Yes.

Like what … specifically?

Space-time curvature. Time dilation and distance contraction are both manifestations of space-time curvature (as well as Special Relativity). They are not sufficient to completely describe General Relativistic gravitational effects, though. The effect of GR on the orbit of Mercury is far more complicated than you seem to think it is.

Dr. Stupid
 
Franko:
Relativity accounts for dilation, Newton doesn't --correct?

That was the difference between the two -- correct? If not, then why did everyone get so excited about Einstein?

So if the reason that Mercury is miscalculated from Earth is because of dilation, are you saying that a person in orbit around Mercury wouldn't also feel the effects of this same dilation?

Stimpson:
If someone living on Mercury were to use Newtonian mechanics to calculate its orbit, they would get a different answer than we get here on Earth (due to time dilation and length contraction). But the answer they get would still be wrong, even from their own frame of reference.

Franko:
So you are saying that General Relativity is accounting for some other factor than Time and Distance dilation?

Like what … specifically?

Stimpson:
Space-time curvature. Time dilation and distance contraction are both manifestations of space-time curvature (as well as Special Relativity). They are not sufficient to completely describe General Relativistic gravitational effects, though.

So what else is there SPECIFICALLY?

You mention Time and Distance dilation (which is the result of the curvature of spacetime). But you seem to be implying that there is another component that would not be fully accounted for by a person standing in the same gravity field as Mercury itself. What is the other component?

Stimpy:
The effect of GR on the orbit of Mercury is far more complicated than you seem to think it is.

How so? I thought the difference between Newton and Einstein was Relativity (curvature of spacetime by gravity)? You seem to be saying there is something else? … what is the something else?
 
Franko,

So what else is there SPECIFICALLY?

You mention Time and Distance dilation (which is the result of the curvature of spacetime). But you seem to be implying that there is another component that would not be fully accounted for by a person standing in the same gravity field as Mercury itself. What is the other component?

What you are asking me to explain is not only far to complicated for me to try to explain on a message board, it would also require me to teach you Tensor Calculus.

The effect of GR on the orbit of Mercury is far more complicated than you seem to think it is.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

How so? I thought the difference between Newton and Einstein was Relativity (curvature of spacetime by gravity)? You seem to be saying there is something else? … what is the something else?

No, I am saying that there is more to spacetime curvature than just time dilation and distance contraction.

For one thing, Mercury is not in a circular orbit. That means that the gravitational strength, and the resulting deviations from Newtonian physics, vary as a function of time. Your assumption that all of the non-Newtonian effects of GR will cancel out if all your measurements are done within the same frame as Mercury, would only be valid if Mercury were in a Uniform gravitational field. It is not.

But you don't have to take my word for it. Go to the Library and check out a book on General Relativity (a textbook, not some popular-science book that introduces a bunch of intuitive analogies, and glosses over the math).

Of course, you would be advised to learn the necessary math first. There is a reason General Relativity is tought as an advanced level physics course.

Dr. Stupid
 
Stimpson:
For one thing, Mercury is not in a circular orbit. That means that the gravitational strength, and the resulting deviations from Newtonian physics, vary as a function of time. Your assumption that all of the non-Newtonian effects of GR will cancel out if all your measurements are done within the same frame as Mercury, would only be valid if Mercury were in a Uniform gravitational field. It is not.

Yeeeaaah Budddy … but here is the thing … if you are in a spaceship orbiting Mercury … and you are doing your simply little Newtonian calculations on a computer. Then as you moved through the changing Gravitational field (Information density) then wouldn’t the Relativistic effects also be changing right along with you (and Mercury as it moved around closer and farther from the Sun). In other words, Time dilation and Distance dilation would be effecting MERCURY, YOU, your SHIP, and the COMPUTER, and ergo your calculations?

Stimpson:
But you don't have to take my word for it. Go to the Library and check out a book on General Relativity (a textbook, not some popular-science book that introduces a bunch of intuitive analogies, and glosses over the math).

Of course, you would be advised to learn the necessary math first. There is a reason General Relativity is tought as an advanced level physics course.

Okay, so essentially what you are telling me is that Newtonian mechanics is wholly dependant on the precise orbital position of the Earth? If our Earth were some how moved to the orbit of Mercury, Newton would have been just another knucklehead?
 
Franko,

For one thing, Mercury is not in a circular orbit. That means that the gravitational strength, and the resulting deviations from Newtonian physics, vary as a function of time. Your assumption that all of the non-Newtonian effects of GR will cancel out if all your measurements are done within the same frame as Mercury, would only be valid if Mercury were in a Uniform gravitational field. It is not.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Yeeeaaah Budddy … but here is the thing … if you are in a spaceship orbiting Mercury … and you are doing your simply little Newtonian calculations on a computer. Then as you moved through the changing Gravitational field (Information density) then wouldn’t the Relativistic effects also be changing right along with you (and Mercury as it moved around closer and farther from the Sun). In other words, Time dilation and Distance dilation would be effecting MERCURY, YOU, your SHIP, and the COMPUTER, and ergo your calculations?

Like I said, the effects don't cancel out. I am sorry if this seems counter-intuitive to you. You don't have to take my word for it. Do the math.

Okay, so essentially what you are telling me is that Newtonian mechanics is wholly dependant on the precise orbital position of the Earth?

No, I am saying that, as an approximation to reality, Newtonian mechanics works better at the orbital position of the Earth, then it does at the orbital position of Mercury. It doesn't give the right answer for the orbit of the Earth, either. The answer it gives is just much closer to the actual orbit, than it is for Mercury.

If our Earth were some how moved to the orbit of Mercury, Newton would have been just another knucklehead?

No, but we would have discovered that his laws of motion were flawed sooner.

Dr. Stupid
 

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