- #36
RandallB
- 1,550
- 0
I don't understand your point, are you saying Einstein only appears to be famous in our world? - just because of something in your fictional water world.rushil said:Randal has epitomised what I have to say... maybe stuff starts going 'wrong' ( as we would consider it) if the people in this universe applied the formulae using the speed of light they measured. I just want to clarify one thing ( while the great discussion continues! ) - we all agree that if Mr Einstein derived his equations using the speed of light he measured in THIS medium, his formulas would not work and would not conform to the results observed! ? - thereby HE IS NOT FAMOUS!
If your talking about someone 'equivalent’ to him in the water world do us a favor and avoid confusion by assign a new name for that person in that “frame” of world.
Lets call that person Ms Eins as a woman would do better in water any way.
I see no reason that Eins would not become famous with her theory of relativity, even if it is based on “slow light”. It would still be an major concept improvement of the old classical 17th century ideas of “Newt” (that name goes well with water).
At least until they discover in a laboratory they can create a volume without any water in it, by removing their aether and replaced with a void. Something will have to happen because problems will show up in the theory. In addition to updating the great but flawed version of relativity by Ms Eins, they will need to come to grips with the concept of a “void” being more fundamental then the aether they have been familiar with – not just that light can travel faster than they thought! Clearing up problems that would have to become obvious as science progressed into the particle physics.