MeJennifer said:
"... she is forced to assume that a uniform "gravitational" field suddenly permeates the universe"
So you are not really sure that every time a space-shuttle takes off we could not instead have some uniform gravitational field permeating the universe instead? Sorry but than one might as well say that some invisible pink unicorn is suddenly deforming space-time.
All I can say is that if you adopt this alternate coordinate system, diffeomorphism invariance means the laws of physics will be no different in this system. Did you look at http://www.einstein-online.info/en/spotlights/background_independence/index.html explaining diffeomorphism-invariance and background independence?
Your argument seems to just be one of aesthetic distaste for the analysis from a particular coordinate system, but that is obviously not a rigorous way of deciding which coordinate systems are acceptable and which are not. A critic of special relativity might come up with a similar aesthetic argument against the equivalence of different inertial frames--they might say something like, "surely you don't expect me to believe that if I am flying away from the Earth in a rocket moving at constant velocity relative to the earth, it is actually the earth, the sun, in fact the entire galaxy which are moving away from the rocket while the rocket is standing still? Ridiculous!" How would you respond to such an argument? I think the only way to respond would be to point out that the criterion physicists used to decide when coordinate systems are "equivalent" is based on checking whether or not the laws of physics work the same way in the different coordinate systems--this is why in
special relativity non-inertial coordinate systems are not equivalent to inertial ones, because if you tried to apply the usual non-tensor equations of SR that work in inertial systems like the rule for time dilation as a function of coordinate velocity, you'd get the wrong answers to physical questions like how much a clock will tick between two events on its worldline. Likewise, electromagnetic fields will obey the non-tensor form of Maxwell's laws in all inertial coordinate systems, but not in non-inertial ones. So this is why physicists say that all inertial coordinate systems are equally valid in SR, but that non-inertial ones are not equivalent to inertial ones. But when you go to GR, you find that the laws of physics expressed in tensor form
will work just the same way in all coordinate systems, including non-inertial ones, so if you apply the same criterion you should conclude that there is no reason to prefer one coordinate system over another.
If you disagree with this reasoning, does that mean you disagree with the rule that if the laws of physics work the same way in different coordinate systems, these coordinate systems are equally valid? If you do reject that rule, then I don't think you have any basis for saying the argument of the SR skeptic I imagined above is wrong, and in fact I don't think you have
any rigorous rule for deciding which coordinate systems are valid and which aren't, it would seem to be based on nothing but your own aesthetic preferences (if you do have a rigorous rule that differs from the one used by physicists, then please state it).
MeJennifer said:
Sorry, but I guess I am a simpleton, I simply don't believe that uniform "gravitational" (whatever the double quotes supposed to mean)
If you read the rest of
that page, they explain the reason for the scare quotes. A "uniform gravitational field" is distinguished from a regular gravitational field because it does not involve matter/energy curving spacetime, not all physicists would even use the term "gravitational field " to describe this.
fields can suddenly permeate the universe as soon as a rocket takes off. Do you believe that?
What does it mean to "believe" or "disbelieve" something which is not a physical fact, but which depends on your choice of coordinate systems? If the relative velocity between me and the Earth is 0.5c, do you "believe" that I am at rest while the Earth is moving away from me at 0.5c, as would be true in my rest frame? Do you "believe" that my current position along the x-axis is x=203.5 meters, as would be true in a coordinate system whose origin is 203.5 meters away from me and whose x-axis crosses my current position? These seem like meaningless questions to me, I think you are taking an overly concrete approach to coordinate-based statements. The only thing I "believe" that's relevant here is that all the laws of physics, when stated in terms of tensor equations, will obey exactly the same equations in a coordinate system where the traveling twin was at rest throughout the journey as they do in a coordinate system where the earth-twin was at rest between the time the traveling twin left and came back, and that this is the criterion that physicists use to decide whether different coordinate systems are equally valid.
JesseM said:
hopefully you'd agree all inertial frames are equally valid from the perspective of SR, and the situation with different non-inertial coordinate systems in GR seems analogous to this.
MeJennifer said:
I think you may have misunderstood me--I was just saying "hopefully you'd agree" with the statement "all inertial frames are equally valid from the perspective of SR", I wasn't asking whether you agreed with the separate statement that "the situation with different non-inertial coordinate systems in GR seems analagous to this", that second part was my own assertion. It's analogous in the sense that exactly the same criterion is used to decide whether different coordinate systems are equally valid in both cases--namely, the criterion of whether the laws of physics obey the same equations in the different coordinate systems. Again, if you have an alternate criterion that's just as rigorous, please describe it; if you don't, then the only conclusion is that your judgements about the validity of different coordinate systems are based on your own personal aesthetic criteria.