Originally posted by Ambitwistor
In most, well, modern modern physics texts, I have found that it does, but we're probably looking at different texts.
In all texts that I've read, each and every author clearly states whether he means "rest mass" or "relativistic mass" when he simply writes "mass" and then continues from there.
I'm referring to the following texts:
"A first course in general relativity," Schutz (uses term "inertial mass" instead of "relativistic mass")
"Gravitation," Misner, Thorne and Wheeler, page 141
"Cosmological Principles," John A. Peacock, Cambridge University Press, (1999)
"Relativity: Special, General and Cosmological," Rindler, Oxford Univ., Press, (2001)
"Basic Relativity," Richard A. Mould, Springer Verlag, (1994)
"Introducing Einstein's Relativity," Ray D'Inverno, Oxford Univ. Press, (1992)
"Concepts of Mass in Contemporary Physics and Philosophy," Mass Jammer, Princeton University Press (200)
"Applications of Classical Physics," Thorne and Blanchard (not yet published)
None of those texts are too ingorable. All of which are well known relativity texts and used quite often.
Then there are articles in the American Journal of Physics.
I've asked from proof of claims that you've made and have gotten only repeats of those claims. Nothing to back them up.