From: xxein on
On Nov 10, 5:02 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> The way you are moving determines how fast light reaches you. That is
> nonsimultaneity. So speeding up and slowing down effect simulataneity
> by effecting the distance light has to travel.

xxein: Change that to "So speeding up and slowing down affects
simultaneity by affecting the speed you are to traveling wrt to light."
From: BURT on
On Nov 13, 3:34 pm, xxein <xx...(a)comcast.net> wrote:
> On Nov 10, 5:02 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > The way you are moving determines how fast light reaches you. That is
> > nonsimultaneity. So speeding up and slowing down effect simulataneity
> > by effecting the distance light has to travel.
>
> xxein:  Change that to "So speeding up and slowing down affects
> simultaneity by affecting the speed you are to traveling wrt to light."

No. you can catch up to light speed by accelerating. You can therefore
be behind light with light moving inch by inch ahead of you.

Mitch Raemsch