ghwellsjr
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But look at the reason she adopted CADO in the first place:Russell E said:No, you missed the point. Sally espouses a specific definition for "current age", based on the momentarily co-moving inertial frames (which are perfectly well defined), and my comment addressed that specific definition, which does indeed require changing your state of motion in order to change your planes of simultaneity. You're making a different comment, namely, that Sally could, if she chose, define "now" differently. That's obviously true (for example, she could adopt the usual definition, i.e., that "now" consists of the entire region outside our past and future light cones), but it doesn't help to clarify for Sally why she should be dis-satisfied with the definition she is espousing.
She thinks there is an "actual current age" that she can know, just like Underwood believes, and it's a false notion. She claims to know that an image of her twin is old and out-of-date and it's simply not true that she can have that knowledge. She and Underwood need to understand that if they want truth, they have to settle only for what they can actually see, anything else is derived from whatever convention they adopt. In other words, if they want their sibling to be younger, they can adopt a convention that permits that. If they want their sibling to be older, they can adopt a convention that permits that.GrammawSally said:Because if I were actually traveling at high velocities in a spacecraft , far from Earth, I would want to know the current age of my twin brother back home. And I would know that any image I saw of him (either through a telescope, or on a TV screen) is old and out-of-date. I would know that image does not show me my twin's actual current age. I would want to correct for the transit time of the image. The CADO equation allows me to easily and quickly do that.