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strangerep
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Yes. Apart from the RP, spatial isotropy (and then spatiotemporal homogeneity) there are also assumptions about continuity, including the assumption that the transformations form a Lie group.nitsuj said:So there is more than just one postulate in his paper in order to reach the conclusions he did.
Sorry -- I don't know what you mean. The RP does not imply isotropy or homogeneity by itself.I'd be able to assume if all physics is the same (inertial) that would imply isotropy and homogeneity of where / when the "physics" plays out.
One requires only the RP, spatial isotropy, and the mathematical features above involving continuity, to deduce the invariant constant c.That said I understood it as the invariance of c speaks to isotropy and homogeneity of space.