Re: Lost in Space
Dave, on host 130.11.71.204
Wednesday, October 7, 1998, at 16:14:51
Re: Lost in Space posted by Darien on Wednesday, October 7, 1998, at 13:38:58:
> > Okay, I have to say this. Everyone will yell at >me, but, oh well... >
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARGH!!
There. I yelled at you.
> Does the spaceship experience "sped up" time, or >does its motion cause the universe to "slow >down"? That sounds stupid, but it's actually a >valid question (at least, to my mind). >
Actually, that's backwards anyway. The space ship's time slows down--meaning less time passes for the ship than for the stay-at-homes.
> One may be tempted to answer this by saying "it >doesn't matter, the effect is the same", but the >process is just as important. I was going to rant >about stuff for quite a while here, but I'm >falling asleep so I think now it distinctly *not* >the right time. I'll rant later. :-}
Well, I suspect what you're really trying to do is answer the question "how does time dilation work?" You say that it *does* matter which is happening, even though the result is the same. But since the results *are* the same either way, the only way it would matter is if you were looking for some underlying idea of how the effect occurs.
Truthfully, I don't know the answer to that question and I don't know if anyone knows it. But I do know that you can use the simple principle of Occam's razor in regards to this question. Which is the simpler answer: A speeding spaceship experiences a slow down in time, or a speeding spaceship somehow causes the whole entire rest of the universe to experience a time "speed-up"? I'd vote for the first. We may not know how the time dilation effect works, but it's much easier to see how a strange effect could act on the object in question, instead of on the entire rest of the universe.
|