M8M said:
I have been reading Lieber's book "The Einstein Theory of Relativity" which describes the derivation of the Lorentz Transformations:
archive.org/details/einsteintheoryof032414mbp -- see pages 39-56
bartleby.com/173/a1.html
The entire derivation makes no sense, whatsoever. Why is it necessary to cover-up the whole problem? You cannot just state that there is a flash of light at the origin and proceed with the mathematics from there. What is the nature of the mysterious light flash at the origin which "stays" with the K and K' frames as they move? I mean, I thought physicists were precise...this is ridiculous.
If somebody thinks they can step-by-step defend and explain either the original Einstein 1920 derivation, or Lieber's butchering of it, please step up.
Lieber's explanation of SR and especially his diagrams are hard to learn from but they are not necessarily wrong. It is difficult to represent in a book how two relatively moving observers "watching" the same expanding sphere of light will conclude that they are each in the center of it. This is actually a fact of nature and needs to be explained by a theory so you can't blame the theory for what might seem like a bizarre situation. Let me see if I can help you accept this fact of nature.
First off, if it isn't already obvious to you, no one can directly watch the propagation of light. Once it has left your vicinity, it is invisible to you. You cannot know where it is at any given moment unless you can see it reflected off some object and even then, you cannot know when it hit that object because the light has to make its way back to you before you can see it. So all you know is how long it took for the light to make a round trip. Do you agree with this?
Secondly, the only way that an observer can have any hope of determining the nature of the propagation of the light emanating from a flash that occurred in his vicinity is to surround himself with some mirrors, all placed a particular distance away, in the shape of a sphere and then observe that the reflected light from each mirror arrives back at his vicinity at the same time. Don't you agree that this would be the best indication that he was in the center of the expanding sphere of light, provided that the light was traveling identically in all directions at the same speed?
Now the third point is that if a flash of light occurred when two observers in relative motion exactly passed each other, they would each need to have their own set of mirrors, and if they each observed that the light from all of their own mirrors arrived back at their locations at the same time, even if they were not at the same location when this happened, they could each make the same claim that they were in the center of the expanding sphere of light, couldn't they?
Well, that is exactly what happens when this experiment is performed. So how can we explain this? The explanation that is offered by any theory is that the mirrors are closer together along the direction of motion and that causes the reflected light for each observer to arrive simultaneously. I made an animation to illustrate these points:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dEhvU31YaCw
Does this animation help you understand how both the moving red guy and the stationary green guy can both equally claim to be in the center of the expanding sphere of light or do you need more explanation?