its strange but because you said this
	
	
		
		
			Aha! There is the problem
		
		
	 
i believe you.
i have to say believe because as yet i can not understand that atall.but for some reason i believe you see what i was getting at.
i will not ask for more explanations ,i,m goner try and work on what you,ve said ,and that could take  weeks, months, years.thanks
i think this is what i need to understand
	
	
		
		
			Thus, when the ball is at the top of the curve, it has zero spatial components, and a temporal component equal c. Nevertheless, when we progress along the straight line, the velocity vector changes direction according to the spacetime coordinates. The spatial components become nonzero, and the ball falls
		
		
	 
i take it this is what i need to understand to answer my question.because this is what happens to the ball at the top.
just reading it quickly. You haven't just progressed along a line here
	
	
		
		
			Nevertheless, when we progress along the straight line, the velocity vector changes direction according to the spacetime coordinates
		
		
	 
its the 
	
	
 word that worries me ,it just looks like a jump,
it just sounds like your thinking "the ball has stopped at the top ,but neverthless we will move on along the line and try and cover up the fact. poor sod won't notice.
i take it that's not what your doing ,but it just sounded a bit like it.
"Ich wrote 
You throw it upwards, and it's moving away. You accelerate with the floor, and when you reach the same speed as the ball, it's no longer moving away. Accelerating further, and you catch up with it.
The ball simply moves inertially."
but this is if the Earth is accelerateing up like the old lift thing .if i was in a big lift and throw the ball upwards  it would go up   and if the lift accelerated quickly just after to match the ball ,the ball would be accelerateing but seem still again.i don't see the point of this in relation to whati was asking.
so in your talk i ask what has caused the floor to move towards the ball. 
"Ich wrote 
That sea of magma on which the continental crust is swimming. Quite a force."
i am sorry i don't get this either .because here i could simplely ask what is causing the magma to do this .so   on and so on  and eventaully  you would have to quote a force .
my point was Einstiens gravity has no force.