*I misstated the apparent paradox. Specifically, if we have car which in 
its rest frame fits in a garage, for sufficient v of the car, the garage 
length is Lorentz contracted, so the car will no longer fit. OTOH, from the 
pov of the garage frame, the length of the car is Lorentz contracted and 
will fit even better. (In my original formulation, I began with the car 
length greater than the garage length, in effect Lorentz contracting the 
garage length without first stating that in the rest frame, the car fits in 
the garage.) AG*

On Wednesday, December 4, 2024 at 2:06:41 PM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:

> In the case of a car whose rest length is greater than the length of the 
> garage, from pov of the garage, the car *will fit inside* if its speed is 
> sufficient fast due to length contraction of the car. But from the pov of 
> the moving car, the length of garage will contract, as close to zero as one 
> desires as its velocity approaches c, so the car *will NOT fit* *inside* 
> the garage. Someone posted a link to an article which claimed, without 
> proof, that this apparent contradiction can be resolved by the fact that 
> simultaneity is frame dependent. I don't see how disagreements of 
> simultaneity between frames solves this apparent paradox. AG

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