Just to post for the benefit of others who might be asking themselves similar questions:
My thoughts:
I am not a physicist, and if I understood or was able to apply general relativity, then I would not be in this dilemma in the first place.
I see the reasoning behind your comments, and I wish to acknowledge your valid points.
I now understand that approximations are often a necessary part of necessary part of general relativity, while in some situations an exact solution is in order.
The community here has put forth the resounding opinion that the notion that Newtonian is not fundamentally wrong and I accepted this as fact for several weeks, until I began to research more deeply and happened upon an introduction to special relativity which struck a chord with me:
"Beginners often believe that special relativity is only about objects that are moving at high velocities. This is a mistake. Special relativity applies at all velocities but at low velocity the predictions of special relativity are almost identical to those of the Newtonian empirical formulae. As an object increases its velocity the predictions of relativity gradually diverge from Newtonian Mechanics." - Instructors Guide to teaching special relativity <http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/74/Special_Relativity_V2.11.pdf>
This seemed to me to contradict an assertion made very clearly by D H:
D H said:
Your notions are fundamentally in error. Classical physics is still valid, just not universally so. It falls apart in the realms of the extremely fast (the domain of special relativity), extremely large (the domain of general relativity), or extremely small (the domain of quantum mechanics).
At I first thought that the book's assertion must be invalid. I decided to make one last search on my quest for truth, and I found that others shared my, and the book's view on the validity of Newtonian physics:
My resources:
* -
http://arxiv.org/ftp/physics/papers/0207/0207109.pdf
* -
http://www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/I_39.html
To address a point made D H:
"One is that physicists almost universally do not view general relativity and quantum mechanics as the ultimate truth."
I never stated that it was ultimate truth, but no science is apodictic, so the word true or truth means the best we have- that is, if true is to have any meaning at all.
My rational is the same as that which argues against the teaching of Aristotelian physics. If I have learned anything from my basic understanding of relativity and cosmology it is that the Earth does not hold a privileged frame of reference. We have no right to assert that the conditions we experience on a day to day basis are, when all's said and done, the only conditions which high school children should be taught about.
As I do more and more research, I find increasingly belittled by your ostensible (albeit, well intended) deception (and I certainly do not mean to say that you don't understand what you are talking about, only that you feel it is not necessary to provide a proof for your disputed assertion).
I am puzzled at this most unscientific expectation in a bastion of science; I hope that I will not be so credulous as to believe in someone's undemonstrated assertion merely because they are an authority figure.
Perhaps I am utterly lost and have misconstrued every word I have read in my research, but I will leave you with a video which tackles the matter in simplistic format which even I can claim to fully understand:
Good bye for now,
Carter
" If we are not able to ask skeptical questions, to interrogate those who tell us that something is true, to be skeptical of those in authority, then we’re up for grabs for the next charlatan, political or religious, who comes ambling along."
- Carl Sagan