On Fri, Aug 3, 2018 at 4:43 AM, Bruno Marchal <[email protected]> wrote:

>>
>> The problem is neither FTL influences nor the creation of Many Worlds
>> violates the know laws of physics
>
>
>
> *>FTL influences violate any minimally realist account of Special
> Relativity.*
>

Yes but that doesn't matter because it doesn't violate Einstein's greatest
achievement General Relativity, the improved and far more comprehensive
Relativity theory he came up with 10 years after Special Relativity.


> *>It reintroduce a universal time and a notion of instantaneity which
> makes few sense in relativistic cosmology. There is no instrumental
> violation, *
>

There is still no way to keep 2 clocks in synchronization unless you had a
continuous record of how much the 2 clocks were accelerating with respect
to each other and what sort of gravitational field they were in, and these
weird quantum correlations won't help. So I agree there is no instrumental
violation, but time is what clocks measure and if there is no way to keep
distant clocks in sync that randomly accelerate and decelerate then there
is no universal time .

John K Clark

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Everything List" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/everything-list.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to