From: Koobee Wublee on
On Jun 25, 9:41 pm, Tom Roberts wrote:

> Yes. This is just one of the theories that are equivalent to SR (i.e. they are
> experimentally indistinguishable from SR).

Don't hide behind interpretations of mathematical models. There are
Larmor's and the Lorentz transforms. See:

http://groups.google.com/group/sci.physics.relativity/msg/9886f187e761954c?hl=en

And

http://groups.google.com/group/sci.physics.relativity/msg/c5a0a3c587fd4df4?hl=en

Larmor's transform does not satisfy the principle of relativity while
the Lorentz transform does, but only Larmor's transform satisfies the
null results of the MMX while the Lorentz transform is a special case
to Larmor's transform. <shrgu>

> This is one way of deriving the
> equations of LET (Lorentz Ether Theory). Lorentz used a completely different
> method in his 1904 paper.

Nonsense! You cannot derive anything with convoluted logics. <shrug>

> There is a much larger class of theories equivalent to SR, consisting of all
> theories in which these two criteria apply:
> a) the round-trip speed of light is isotropically c in any inertial
> frame

This requires Voigt's postulate. <shrug>

> and
> b) the one-way speed of light is isotropically c in one frame

This has never shown so by any experimentations. <shrug>

> Note that (a) is solidly established experimentally,

Not quite! Through interpretations to experimental results. <shrug>

> and (b) is basically what
> it means to have an aether frame, or any sort of "preferred" frame.
>
> If you work out the details, you find that all of these theories
> have transforms between inertial frames that differ from the
> Lorentz transform only in the way coordinate clocks are
> synchronized in inertial frames. Note that except for SR and
> LET, the synchronization method is ad hoc and artificial.

Mysticism is making you ever so confused. <shrug>

> I posted a much longer series of three articles on this 'way back in 1999 --
> http://groups.google.com/group/sci.physics.relativity/msg/15ceaad17be...

You have not learnt anything in the past 9 years. There is a
difference between Larmor's and the Lorentz transforms. <shrug>
From: Peter Webb on

"Koobee Wublee" <koobee.wublee(a)gmail.com> wrote in message
news:dbb516ea-11aa-4a0b-a20b-73f772448fee(a)i28g2000yqa.googlegroups.com...
> On Jun 25, 9:41 pm, Tom Roberts wrote:
>
>> Yes. This is just one of the theories that are equivalent to SR (i.e.
>> they are
>> experimentally indistinguishable from SR).
>
> Don't hide behind interpretations of mathematical models. There are
> Larmor's and the Lorentz transforms. See:
>
> http://groups.google.com/group/sci.physics.relativity/msg/9886f187e761954c?hl=en
>
> And
>
> http://groups.google.com/group/sci.physics.relativity/msg/c5a0a3c587fd4df4?hl=en
>
> Larmor's transform does not satisfy the principle of relativity while
> the Lorentz transform does, but only Larmor's transform satisfies the
> null results of the MMX while the Lorentz transform is a special case
> to Larmor's transform. <shrgu>

Are there any experimental predictions of SR with which you disagree?

Or do you believe that every experimental prediction of SR is absolutely
correct?


From: Koobee Wublee on
On Jun 28, 3:33 pm, colp <c...(a)solder.ath.cx> wrote:

> colp:
> Your process of computation involves restricting calculations
> which could produce a paradox to a single frame of reference,
>
> Daryl:
> Right. The point is that doing anything else is mathematically
> and physically nonsense.
>
> colp:
> Yes. And that nonsense is a direct result of the premises of SR,
> nothing else.

Congratulations, colp. You have just checkmated these Einstein
Dingleberries with these precise and concise summary. Good job.
<high five and regards>
From: colp on
On Jun 29, 6:57 pm, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 28, 3:33 pm, colp <c...(a)solder.ath.cx> wrote:
>
> > colp:
> > Your process of computation involves restricting calculations
> > which could produce a paradox to a single frame of reference,
>
> > Daryl:
> > Right. The point is that doing anything else is mathematically
> > and physically nonsense.
>
> > colp:
> > Yes. And that nonsense is a direct result of the premises of SR,
> > nothing else.
>
> Congratulations, colp.  You have just checkmated these Einstein
> Dingleberries with these precise and concise summary.  Good job.
> <high five and regards>

TY
From: PD on
On Jun 29, 1:57 am, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 28, 3:33 pm, colp <c...(a)solder.ath.cx> wrote:
>
> > colp:
> > Your process of computation involves restricting calculations
> > which could produce a paradox to a single frame of reference,
>
> > Daryl:
> > Right. The point is that doing anything else is mathematically
> > and physically nonsense.
>
> > colp:
> > Yes. And that nonsense is a direct result of the premises of SR,
> > nothing else.
>
> Congratulations, colp.  You have just checkmated these Einstein
> Dingleberries with these precise and concise summary.

:>)
I see you either share COLP's Oversimplified Relativity or you have
your own KW variant.

>  Good job.
> <high five and regards>