Efficiency is irrelevant. What is important is what works. Newton's theory gives wrong answers to some questions. It doesn't work in all the situations Einstein's does.
First of all, I never said that I am a fan of Classical Physics! I said that I am totally opposite in erasing Classical Physics! I accept that Newton's theory gives wrong answers to some questions, BUT the same does General Relativity, Special Relativity, Quantum Mechanics... etc to some other questions.
Neither General Relativity works in all the situations.
That is an utterly useless statement to make in a science forum: everything we talk about in a science forum is theory and to use that fact in a misguided attempt to attack one theory is a crackpottery red-flag.
No comment...
I'm not sure what you mean here, but I suspect that is because you don't know what you are talking about either - it appears you don't even understand the concept of science itself.
Excuse me, but you are not there to JUDGE me! Could you please be more polite?
I said that Physics is always based on experiments! There isn't any experiment which proves that spacetime is bendable (Do you consider the light curve as an experiment? In this case, I hardly can understand it.) Until then, we can't be totally sure if the predictions of General Relativity are correct.
SR and GR came into being because of known flaws in the previous existing theory (Newton's gravity theory, Newton's laws of motion). It is popular today for one reason and one reason only: it makes accurate predictions about how the universe works and Newton's theories don't.
I totally agree in that. I only said that there are some parts in General Relativity which are very difficult to be understood (like the spacetime bend) and maybe somehow could be avoided.
That said, all theories by definition are incomplete. So your attempts to denigrate GR by saying it is 'only a theory' and that it is incomplete reduces to 'GR sucks because it is good science.' Physics is mathematical. Being expressable verbaly is a distant second (some would even say completely unimportant) to the need for a theory to be expressable mathematically.
I'm not trying to denigrate General Relativity. I insist that it's only a theory because there aren't any experiments which prove that this is reality. In fact, I don't understand what's the concept of the spacetime bend.
Yes, physics is mathematical. But in physics, we usually modulate maths in order to take solutions that exist in reality. For example, in Mechanics we don't accept solutions with infinite amplitude when we describe the movement of an oscillator.
So, as I said before I was wondering if we could avoid these complicated and very revolutionary predictions by modulating maths.
And I must remind you now of the forum guidlines regarding personal theories and overly speculative posts.
Did you find any personal theory or overly speculative post?

If you are still talking about the light curvature, I inform you that the thought I mentioned is written in "Modern Physics" (by Raymond A. Serway, Clement J. Moses, Curt A. Moyer). Apparently, it's not a personal theory.