matheinste
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Passionflower said:A spacetime interval is the distance between two events in spacetime this is not necessarily the same as the length of an observer's path between two events. In some cases however they could be identical namely in the case the observer takes the largest possible travel time between these events.
This is not a post telling people how to use various terms but just a post to explain the difficulties I find. Perhaps it will help others.
I find that the mathematical definition of the spacetime interval describes umambiguously, as of course a mathematical definition should do, what the interval means. As has been said, and something of which I am also guilty, using imprecise words or words which can have varied meanings does not help. The problem I find with using words to describe the interval is finding ones that convey the idea of a straight line in spacetime. The value of the interval is usually not the same as that of the path, although if the object is traveling inertially it is, and so the interval is often loosely defined as a the legth of a straight line path between events.
I seem to remember in an early section of Eddington's classic Mathematics of General Relativity that he describes the interval and proper time as measures rather than lengths or times.
Matheinste.