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The universe appears "old", but it is still less than 10,000 years old
RE: The universe appears "old", but it is still less than 10,000 years old
(December 4, 2013 at 7:44 pm)Ryantology Wrote: Makes sense. Also, the reason that cars were invented was so that we could employ mechanics.

The inventors of the automobile did not possess knowledge of future events so that was a fallacious analogy.

(December 4, 2013 at 8:05 pm)Chuck Wrote:


I love how you act as if I am the one who came up with the Anisotropic Synchrony Convention even though it has been around for nearly 100 years. The Einstein Synchrony Convention is not experimentally testable either so your objections are irrelevant. Conventions are not testable, they are stipulations.

(December 5, 2013 at 11:22 am)Optimistic Mysanthrope Wrote: Oh, were you referring to just creationist journals? I took it to mean creationists as a whole - my mistake. I guess I won't bring up "malachite man" then Big Grin

Yes, and I will not bring up Archaeoraptor either. Tongue All bushels have their bad apples.

Quote: Well Lisle's objection to ESC seemed to be based on the effects on simultaneity of different inertial reference frames. He specifically noted in regard to ASC that the position of the earth at the moment of creation would not have that different to its position 6 months later.

Accurate statement.

Quote: This is the main reason I believe that such a convention should have detectable implications. On the other hand, if the is the act of changing position that causes the time dilation, I don't see how it differs much from ESC in its implications, since the earth is in constant motion.

I think it’s because the change in position is negligible while the change in velocity is not since the Earth is moving in the completely opposite direction every six months.

Quote: I was certainly under the impression that it was the speed, rather than acceleration that causes the time dilation in ESC. The formula for the Lorentz contraction uses relative velocity, not acceleration. As an example, this website has a calculator of relativistic change factor that uses speed.

It may be, but this makes it sound as if it is due to acceleration…

“In physics, the twin paradox is a thought experiment in special relativity involving identical twins, one of whom makes a journey into space in a high-speed rocket and returns home to find that the twin who remained on Earth has aged more. This result appears puzzling because each twin sees the other twin as traveling, and so, according to an incorrect naive application of time dilation, each should paradoxically find the other to have aged more slowly. However, this scenario can be resolved within the standard framework of special relativity (because the twins are not equivalent; the space twin experienced additional, asymmetrical acceleration when switching direction to return home), and therefore is not a paradox in the sense of a logical contradiction.

Starting with Paul Langevin in 1911, there have been numerous explanations of this paradox, many based upon there being no contradiction because there is no symmetry—only one twin has undergone acceleration and deceleration, thus differentiating the two cases. Max von Laue argued in 1913 that since the traveling twin must be in two separate inertial frames, one on the way out and another on the way back, this frame switch is the reason for the aging difference, not the acceleration per se.[1] Explanations put forth by Albert Einstein and Max Born invoked gravitational time dilation to explain the aging as a direct effect of acceleration.[2]” – Wikipedia, “Twin Paradox” [Emphasis added by SW]

Quote: Even if it is the change of position that causes the effect, I'd have thought that it would still be detectable as you could have to different clocks traversing the same distance at different speeds. If take the differences between ASC and ESC into account by calculating the relative distance that each clock travels using the RCF, you can ensure that both clocks do indeed traverse the same distance and so if ASC is correct then each clock should show the same discrepancy with a stationary control clock, regardless of the velocity of each.

I believe they would show the same dilation under either convention because under ASC they are traveling the same distance while under ESC the slower of the two traveling clocks is traveling for a longer period of time than the faster clock thus undergoing a longer period of time dilation.

Clock 1 = 2 hours at 20,000MPH
Clock 2 = 4 hours at 10,000MPH



Quote:Really? Then why wait so long for christ's debut? I'd have thought that his example, teachings and path to redemption would have been particularly useful to the people of noah's era. I'm sure they would've appreciated that more than global extinction, anyway.

People during Noah’s time were saved by Christ’s death as well as people after Christ.


Quote:Yeah, but that's kinda what I'm getting at. If ASC is an illusory effect which is itself caused by time dilations, then the rest of the universe would only have been created in 6 days from the perspective of earth. Surely the whole point in a literal interpretation is that the bible really is inerrant, rather than merely being an accurate depiction as long you look at things the right way. This makes it sound as though the timing of creation week is entirely dependant on interpretation which, to my mind, totally undermines the entire YEC stance.

Well there is no such thing as absolute simultaneity so scripture has to be using a convention in order to describe the timing of creation week. I will give you another example, there are parts of the Bible that describe the Sun rising and setting. There is no such thing as absolute motion, but scripture is speaking from the perspective of the Earth. It could have chosen to describe such motion from the reference frame of the Sun or the Milky Way galaxy but that would have caused utter confusion to the readers. Under this system scripture is not wrong by saying the Universe was created in six days because as far as we know there is no absolute standard to measure the timing of such events by without stipulating a convention.

(December 5, 2013 at 4:44 pm)Optimistic Mysanthrope Wrote: I'm not trying to find "wiggle room" at all. I want ASC to be proven wrong and it should be perfectly clear from my posts that I'm trying to find a flaw with it, but every experiment I've found so far and every example given on this forum has suffered from confirmation bias. I'm not going to overlook a flaw just because doing so would give a preferred result - doing so would only undermine our position.

Even if you don't believe my intentions and really do think I'm trying to find "wiggle room", you should note the two main questions I am asking when looking at each experiment are:
1) Is this actually a test of the one way speed of light?
2) Is there an issue with simultaneity that hasn't been taken into consideration?

Yes! I would add a third, “does the experiment subtly assume what it is trying to prove?” Orogenicman’s proposed experiment does this. He claims that we know the speed that electrons travel at but we do not know the one-way speed of an electron any more than we do the one-way speed of light. So his experiment actually has two fatal flaws, the other being the moving of the detector thus causing time dilation as you have already pointed out.

Quote: If people could ask those questions themselves before they post a experiment that "proves" isotropy, it would save time and effort for all involved .

No kidding, I have been doing this tango for three years now.

(December 5, 2013 at 9:20 pm)Chuck Wrote: Regardless of your assumption, I think your experiment is a good one, because your assumption is an absolute minimal one, and all other assumptions are equally untestable, but all are more elaborate, and therefore contrived.

As long as your experiment demonstrates the desired results Chuck is completely fine with it fallaciously begging the question!

(December 6, 2013 at 12:03 pm)Chuck Wrote: 2. Propose a verifiable underlying mechanism that could cause the result to be difference.

What underlying mechanism causes the results to be the same every time?
Reply



Messages In This Thread
RE: The universe appears "old", but it is still less than 10,000 years old - by Statler Waldorf - December 6, 2013 at 10:19 pm

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