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Originally Posted by milli360
Quote:
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Originally Posted by Sam5
Well, look, I assume Bob is “not moving” relative to his clothes, but you have him moving relative to “at home”, so he will experience some acceleration, so you can force his atomic clock to tick slower than Ann’s, so don’t you think you should tell your readers that he really is “moving” relative to "at home", rather than “not moving”?
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Eh?
Let's see, here's the page...
In the middle of the second paragraph, it says "Ann stays at home and Bob rockets away at 3/5 light speed."
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In that paragraph you are re-capping your “special” relativity page. Then in the next paragraph you go on to the GR theory. Then you say Bob doesn’t move and isn’t resting in a gravity field, but he experiences acceleration. This can be confusing to students who don’t know you and aren’t familiar with your verbose rhetorical prolixity and textual machinations.