I don't agree with Einstein. Neither do you. Therefore on that part we both agree. I can talk about relativity and its aspects yet not agree with it. I have been doing that for pages herein.marengo wrote:What do you mean it is not a test. I have just taken two identical clocks and tried it out. OK, thats not quite true. I dont have clocks accurate enough to measure the small difference. But if I did have then I could do it. Hafele and Keating did it.viscount aero wrote:That isn't a test. That is a thought experiment only, just as what Einstein's theory largely is--an elaborate (and highly innovative) thought experiment. Yes that is a kind of a test. But you have done no physical test. Nor has anyone done a test for relativity who has flown atomic clocks on planes. This test cannot be actually done because each local inertial reference frame is subjective whereby the relative observations for each LIF are true for each LIF--therefore the "remote" and "local" reference frame is the same for every observer. Einstein himself concluded that "every reference frame has its own particular time. Unless we consider the reference-body to which the statement of time refers, there is no meaning in a statement of the time of an event."
The rest of your quote is pure muddle.One does not need to concern yourself with IRFs. None exist on Earth anyway.
You seem to be allowing Einstein to confuse you. I thought you did not agree with him.
I am restating what Einstein's relativity proposes to set up the fallacy of the clock experiments. I'm not promoting the validity of relativity. I'm refuting it. And I'm starting with the HK experiment.
Relativity is LIF-based--everything is subjective in its own time. I am then presenting the HK clocks/planes premise and stating that it could have never tested for relativity in the first place because relativity cannot be objectively tested for. Surely the scientists and Einstein himself must have considered this?