Doc Al
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As has been stated several times: If you and I are in inertial frames moving with respect to each other, then we both see each other's clocks run slow. We both see our own clocks running just fine.Joanna Dark said:That's an answer. So you are saying that if you were at a stationary or inertial train station and I was traveling at ANY constant velocity in any straight line (towards you or away from you or even parallel to you) my clock would run at the same rate as yours? I was led to believe that in this case time dilation would still occur for me and my clock would still be behind yours.
Further: Just because my clocks run slow according to your measurements, does not mean that something has physically changed in my clocks. (And vice versa.) Time dilation (and other relativistic effects) are best viewed as due to the (admittedly strange at first) nature of time and space itself. It would be quite bizarre indeed if just by moving with respect to someone that you could somehow physically affect their clocks in their own frame. Relativity is strange, but not that strange.
To really understand this, and not just parrot the conclusions, you must study the details. It doesn't take any more than a bit of algebra to derive time dilation and other effects from the premises of relativity. Of course that doesn't prove relativity true--just that it is internally consistent and makes sense. What gives us confidence that relativity is "true" is the mountain of experimental evidence that has been accumulated over the last 100 years. Much of modern physics would make no sense without relativity.