PeterDonis
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Sugdub said:I mean that I've never seen a statement whereby the measure S of a space-time interval varies depending on the path followed end-to-end, I've never seen a statement whereby what a clock measures is nothing else than S along a definite path. These are things you don't find in presentations of SR easily accessible by non-physicists.
Ah, I see. Yes, pop science or layman's presentations of SR (like pop science or layman's presentations of science in general) don't take the same care as textbooks or scientific papers do. That's why you shouldn't try to learn a science from pop science or layman's presentations. Textbooks on SR, at least the ones I'm familiar with, do address these points.
Sugdub said:In the Newtonian context, there is no doubt that what a clock measures relates to an interval alongside the time axis.
No, this is not correct. In Newtonian physics, clocks measure absolute time, which is not linked to the "time axis" of any inertial frame. (It can't be, because the "time axes" of different inertial frames are different, but absolute time is the same in all of them.) It appears that your confusion about terminology in SR arises from a confusion about terminology in Newtonian physics.
Sugdub said:The semantics of “time interval” points to an interval alongside the time axis
No, it doesn't. See above.
As a further point, the semantics of "time interval", or any such term involving "time", has to change when you go from Newtonian physics to SR, because SR does not have absolute time. So your general argument that we should adjust the semantics of terms like "time interval" so they match the Newtonian semantics is not valid, because it can't be done.