ddr
I can just give you a clue:Originally posted by cytokinesis
Care to explain to me how that works?
No the time you measure is proportional with the inner time of your watch and it doesn't apply on any other system cause every system more precizely every trajectory in every system has it's own time.Originally posted by cytokinesis
And what does that prove? The fact that we measure time?
Wow... this is... absolutely groundbreaking...
you might say it's new discovery of time but it has nothing to do with Einstein's theories.Originally posted by cytokinesis
So you're restating Einstein's discovery that Newton's 'universal clock' idea was wrong?
Originally posted by ddr
you might say it's new discovery of time but it has nothing to do with Einstein's theories.
my approach is slightly different from the Einstein's one. from my point of view time is a variable closesly dependent on the conditions in the observed system. in my approach you you won't find dilatiion or things. in einstein's approach you will not find the fact that time remains the same when the system remains only in one state.Originally posted by neutroncount
Um..no.
That all time is different to each object relative to everything else IS what Special Relativity an General Relativity is all about. You've discovered nothing new.
Actually, your first sentence fits with relativity (sorta), your second doesn't, and your third does.Originally posted by ddr
from my point of view time is a variable closesly dependent on the conditions in the observed system. in my approach you you won't find dilatiion or things. in einstein's approach you will not find the fact that time remains the same when the system remains only in one state.
Originally posted by russ_watters
if all you are doing is observing motion in one reference frame, relativity doesn't do much for you except assure you that the laws of physics work.When moving between or comparing two different reference frames, then things like time dilation become important.