- #36
confutatis
hellfire said:I do not understand why can't we say it is moving. If there is a background spacetime, one can define a reference frame at any point in spacetime. Then the photon's coordinates will vary in this reference frame and thus the photon will move.
I used to think so myself, but relativity is full of subtleties. The thing I came to understand is that objects don't move relative to spacetime, they only move relative to each other. At least in SR, spacetime is just a geometrical construct used to model the movement of physical bodies - it doesn't exist in the absence of movement.
Even if you think spacetime may be defined in your single-photon universe, you have to ask yourself how it's possible for your photon to move relative to it. If your photon's coordinates are changing with time, that can also be interpreted to mean your coordinate system is moving, but it doesn't make sense to say a coordinate system is moving when that coordinate system is not attached to anything real. The only thing you can use to define a coordinate system in your universe is the photon itself, so you can't really say it is moving relative to its own coordinates.
Hope that helps.