From: BURT on
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.

From: Inertial on
"BURT" <macromitch(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:b3b62247-058d-403a-bae0-518f4452b93c(a)i12g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
> The way you are moving determines how fast light reaches you.

How fast .. it is always c. How long it takes for you .. that depends on
the distance of the source at the time the light was emitted from it in your
frame of reference.

> That is
> nonsimultaneity. So speeding up and slowing down effect simulataneity
> by effecting the distance light has to travel.

Yes .. if you change your frame of reference (by slowing down or speeding up
... also known as acceleration) then that changes simultaneity and how long
it takes.

From: PD on
On Nov 10, 4:57 pm, "Inertial" <relativ...(a)rest.com> wrote:
> "BURT" <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message
>
> news:b3b62247-058d-403a-bae0-518f4452b93c(a)i12g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
>
> > The way you are moving determines how fast light reaches you.
>
> How fast .. it is always c.  How long it takes for you .. that depends on
> the distance of the source at the time the light was emitted from it in your
> frame of reference.
>
> > That is
> > nonsimultaneity. So speeding up and slowing down effect simulataneity
> > by effecting the distance light has to travel.
>
> Yes .. if you change your frame of reference (by slowing down or speeding up
> .. also known as acceleration) then that changes simultaneity and how long
> it takes.

You made sense of BURT's post?
From: BURT on
On Nov 10, 4:11 pm, PD <thedraperfam...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On Nov 10, 4:57 pm, "Inertial" <relativ...(a)rest.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > "BURT" <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message
>
> >news:b3b62247-058d-403a-bae0-518f4452b93c(a)i12g2000prg.googlegroups.com....
>
> > > The way you are moving determines how fast light reaches you.
>
> > How fast .. it is always c.  How long it takes for you .. that depends on
> > the distance of the source at the time the light was emitted from it in your
> > frame of reference.
>
> > > That is
> > > nonsimultaneity. So speeding up and slowing down effect simulataneity
> > > by effecting the distance light has to travel.
>
> > Yes .. if you change your frame of reference (by slowing down or speeding up
> > .. also known as acceleration) then that changes simultaneity and how long
> > it takes.
>
> You made sense of BURT's post?- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

If light and matter move in space the distances inbetween them change
due to it.

Mitch Raemsch
From: Inertial on
"PD" <thedraperfamily(a)gmail.com> wrote in message
news:d5eb2528-3da3-4c4b-b836-afa944dbe0d9(a)r5g2000yqb.googlegroups.com...
> On Nov 10, 4:57 pm, "Inertial" <relativ...(a)rest.com> wrote:
>> "BURT" <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message
>>
>> news:b3b62247-058d-403a-bae0-518f4452b93c(a)i12g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
>>
>> > The way you are moving determines how fast light reaches you.
>>
>> How fast .. it is always c. How long it takes for you .. that depends on
>> the distance of the source at the time the light was emitted from it in
>> your
>> frame of reference.
>>
>> > That is
>> > nonsimultaneity. So speeding up and slowing down effect simulataneity
>> > by effecting the distance light has to travel.
>>
>> Yes .. if you change your frame of reference (by slowing down or speeding
>> up
>> .. also known as acceleration) then that changes simultaneity and how
>> long
>> it takes.
>
> You made sense of BURT's post?

Hehehe .. maybe he's slipping :)