- #36
neopolitan
- 647
- 0
JesseM said:Can you specify what you're talking about here?
I knew about the FTL limitations and the inability to violate causality (outside of the theoretical tachyon). I just didn't want someone to assume that I thought that causality was being violated and that I was therefore trying to invalidate relativity.
I am also aware that you can't see causally related events simultaneously without something going FTL.
Writing something that could be interpreted as implying that I wasn't aware of this FTL issue did get you to respond though. I note that you tend to respond very quickly when you can easily find an error. But not when it seems you can't, such as in the post before the one you are responding to here (eg #33). I am trying my best not to impugn motives, but it would help me to resist the temptation if you could respond to that one now.
In addition, while we both accept that you can't see causally related events simultaneoulsy, can we both accept that we can observe causally related events from an inertial frame such that the events are skewed (ie the events may not be simultaneous in the frame in which they occur, but the relationship between them is skewed, similarly to the relationship between the two clocks on the table are skewed)?
Can you then see if you can understand what I said here?
neopolitan said:In the frame not at rest relative to the table, there is an event "now" in which a past event and future event are observed simultaneously. To me that means the past event is brought forward to the future (now is in the future relative to the past) and the _future_ event is brought back to the past (now is in the past relative to the future).
Note that I not claiming the ability to see the cue ball both unwhacked and in the pocket, just what we have talked about before - the clock at one end of the table saying 2s and the clock at the other end saying 10s. These clocks are not causally related.
cheers,
neopolitan
Last edited: