DaleSpam said:
I have nothing against that, and looking at the dirty details can often illuminate interesting connections between things that may have previously been assumed to be unrelated.
So if we have permission (hope it is OK with PF rules), I will share my reflections on the subject for your comments.
The (apparent) weakness of the light clock thought experiment is that it bases TD on the fact that "light is different", in that its motion is unaffected by the motion of the source.
The objection some people make is: then TD applies only to light clocks, but not to ball clocks, since the motion of the balls is affected by the motion of the source.
The counter-objection is: balls are like light in their acceleration, which is caused by an EM interaction; any other process responsible for changes (and susceptible of being used for building clocks), like for instance beta decay, follows the same pattern as light, at least in this respect.
The challenge is then showing why this similarity renders the adequate quantitative result, i.e. why light clocks and ball clocks tick exactly alike.
My proposal is the following. If you want a clock that measures absolute time, you need one of these two:
- A moving thing inside the clock with infinitely high velocity.
- A moving thing with infinitely low velocity, that is to say, without acceleration.
Obviously, none of these clocks would "work" since they would not mark changes. But they serve as ideal models against which to compare real clocks:
- Light clocks choose the first reference: they try to accommodate to the fastness ideal.
- Mechanical clocks choose the second, the slowness ideal, from which they only depart to the extent they are accelerated through a "lightlike" process and hence to this extent they conform to light's pattern.
Metaphorically: in the case of mechanical clocks their virtue is slowness, their sin is speed, but their sin comes with an inherent penitence, which is that to the extent they are faster, they are more accelerated and hence more like light.
If you feel like that, we could discuss on the related math. Otherwise, I would not bore you.