- #176
Ken Natton
- 187
- 0
Well, all I can say, Austin0 is that I do not understand where my interpretation changes. It seems perfectly consistent to me. Again, I suppose you could be pedantic and say that they would only ever disagree about spatial distances and time durations if they were both taking a Newtonian Mechanical view. If they had both studied relativity, they would understand that distances and times would not appear the same for each other and if they were comfortable with the mathematics, they could even work out exactly what the distances and times would appear to be for each other. But the point is that they don’t really need to. If they do their Minkowski calculations with their own distance and time measurements and arrive at a consistent spacetime distance, then there is no disagreement.
As I have said, I accept that the diagrams that appear further up this thread show best how the two viewpoints change over the duration of traveling twin’s journey. It just seemed to me that there was a much simpler way of understanding why traveling twin is younger when the journey is over, and why such a notion is consistent with relativity theory.
As I have said, I accept that the diagrams that appear further up this thread show best how the two viewpoints change over the duration of traveling twin’s journey. It just seemed to me that there was a much simpler way of understanding why traveling twin is younger when the journey is over, and why such a notion is consistent with relativity theory.