- #106
Sjorris
- 23
- 0
I don't agree with you DaleSpam,
Interpretating a theory allows for completing, expanding or otherwise enhancing it, because you can venture qualitatively where you usually wouldn't go mathematically. QM in it's early days profited from this, and when Einstein tried to interpret Maxwell's equation he stumbled upon certain ideas which would later lead to SR (I'm referring to the thought-experiment said to be performed by Einstein in which he imagined himself being in the frame of reference of a photon, 'riding a beam of light' so to say).
Momentarily, no one has a clue how to distinct the two earlier named interpretations of how exactly spacetime is curved (spacetime itself or the geodesic), but when both interpretations excist, one might sooner or later come up with some way to verify which interpretation is the 'right' one, which one more closely resembles reality (or it may turn out the two interpretations are in fact effectively identical). Qualitative interpretation is, in my opinion, far more important than mathematical, as math is 'just' a tool (be it a very good one) and usually less understood by humans than thought in native language.
If you see a theory just as a complicated calculator to verify experiments with, then what is the point of having the theory?