Originally posted by Ambitwistor
Pmb, there is no such thing as "correctness of opinion" when it comes to terminology.
Nobody made such a claim.
Not if you are speaking of 4-force, or proper force, which is the point.
That is incorrect. The gravitational force is not a 4-force.
Claims such as
is considered today means that the entire community holds such an opinion. That is clearly not the case. In fact the most authoritative GR expert that I know of, i.e. John Stachel, holds otherwise.
Or survey the literature, i.e. papers, which most currently reflect the physics community.
Your forcing definition - i.e. you're insunutating that modern physics text should not be included in the literature you refer to.
...not everybody considers an accelerating observer in a flat spacetime to experience a gravitational field or see particles "accelerate gravitationally".
Not everybody considers 1 + 1 to be equal to 2 either. So what?
re - e-mailing people. Don't give advice that you would never take. I've given that advice to you before and you've always ignored it.
If you do take your own advice then read
General Relativity and Gravitation, Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation, (Stockholm,Cambridge University Press, Jul 6-12, 1986), "How Einstein Discovered General Relativity: A Historical Tale With Some Contemporary Morals," J.J. Stachel
This paper reflects Stachels opinion on how gravity should be defined, i.e. according to Einstein's definition rather than the (inorrect) way that Von Laue suggested.
As far as how "SR" is defined one simply has to look in Schutz's text or most other modern physics texts.