From: BURT on
On Mar 31, 6:02 pm, "Paul Hovnanian P.E." <P...(a)Hovnanian.com> wrote:
> BURT wrote:
>
> > On Mar 31, 3:26 pm, ben6993 <ben6...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
> > > On Mar 31, 9:11 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > > > When the train is passing the station at high speed and it looks at
> > > > its clock SR says it will be running slow. But for how long can the
> > > > station clock be running slow if it is aging faster?
>
> > > > This is the fundamental clock time contradiction in SR.
>
> > > > Mitch Raemsch
>
> > > A paradox is that British rail trains often run slower than the
> > > clocks, yet there can still be anouncements of apologies for late
> > > arrivals made only after the trains have already departed the
> > > stations.
>
> > > Also, trains are often announced to be "shortly arriving".  That does
> > > not mean that they are travelling so fast that they have contracted in
> > > length.  It just means that a coach has been removed so that more
> > > passengers need to stand.
>
> > Atoms don't shrink flat.
>
> How do you know?

Because physics won't work.

Mitch Raemsch


>
> --
> Paul Hovnanian     mailto:P...(a)Hovnanian.com
> ------------------------------------------------------------------
> If you're ridin' ahead of the herd, take a look back every now and
> then to make sure it's still there.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

From: DougC on
BURT wrote:
> When the train is passing the station at high speed and it looks at
> its clock SR says it will be running slow. But for how long can the
> station clock be running slow if it is aging faster?

If it is passing the station at high speed, that is called an express
train. The train that stops at all stations is called a local. Yet,
for some reason all the clocks hanging on the wall in the stations
remain on the same time, disregarding the antics of the trains. You
need to look at the clocks aboard the trains.

> This is the fundamental clock time contradiction in SR.

Fundamental but a little hard to detect. Those express trains reach
the end of the line and turn around for a speedy run the other
direction. Does that undo the difference in the clock aboard? Or add
to it?

Doug Chandler

From: Sue... on
On Mar 31, 4:11 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> When the train is passing the station at high speed and it looks at
> its clock SR says it will be running slow. But for how long can the
> station clock be running slow if it is aging faster?
>
> This is the fundamental clock time contradiction in SR.

http://meshula.net/wordpress/?p=222

Sue...
>
> Mitch Raemsch

From: John Murphy on
On 31 Mar, 21:11, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:

> When the train is passing the station at high speed and it looks at
> its clock SR says it will be running slow. But for how long can the
> station clock be running slow if it is aging faster?
>
> This is the fundamental clock time contradiction in SR.
>
> Mitch Raemsch

It means that if the train is moving faster than the station, then the
train is or is not moving at all, since the station is, in effect,
going backwards. From the platform, we see it one way, from the train,
another. All the same, it is convenient to think of the station as
stationary so that it offers a reference point. The difficult arises
when someone who is neither the station or the train has to report
back. And where does he or she stand? If 'the train is standing in the
station waiting to refuel', both the train and the station are
neverthless moving in relation to the sun, the moon, and the stars:
they are turning around galatically. Now, if they are turning around
galactically, it is possible that they are, in turn, turning upon
something else, but if they are, that something else must in turn be
turning upon another thing and so on. And we can never find the last
thing, simply because if we did there would have to be another last
thing that found that thing, and so, forth we would have to go, but it
may turn out that we are only dealing with a logical problem!

Physics relies on relational movements within the relational
university. As to gravity in physics, it is a bit like 'g' as a
postulate in IQ assessment! There is of course an assymetry as regard
the station clock- but only as regards things that are at different
speeds fromit.
--
Harbinger.

From: BURT on
If the train watches the stations clock go slow then when does it have
the time to age more?

Mitch Raemsch