Will you ever cease being an abusive prick? 

On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 2:35:47 AM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:

> AG, simultaneity resolves the disagreement by showing how events are 
> ordered differently in each frame. In the garage frame, the car fits 
> because the back passes the entrance and the front is still at the exit 
> simultaneously. In the car frame, simultaneity shifts, and the back passes 
> the entrance after the front has already left the exit, meaning it doesn’t 
> fit. Length contraction alone doesn’t explain this—it just sets the stage. 
> Simultaneity, derived directly from the LT, is what resolves the so-called 
> paradox. Stop pretending it’s optional—it’s fundamental.
>
>
>
> Le ven. 10 janv. 2025, 10:26, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> a écrit :
>
>>
>>
>> On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 2:12:49 AM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>> AG, your claim that the Lorentz transformations alone resolve the 
>> disagreement is fundamentally flawed. The LT does indeed underlie all 
>> relativistic principles, but simultaneity is not separate from the LT—it’s 
>> a direct consequence of it. Ignoring simultaneity while invoking the LT is 
>> like using a calculator but refusing to press the equals button.
>>
>> Length contraction, derived from the LT, explains how lengths change, but 
>> it doesn’t address the core disagreement: the ordering of events. That’s 
>> where simultaneity comes in. Without it, you can’t determine when the car’s 
>> endpoints align with the garage’s endpoints in any frame. Your "method" 
>> stops short of explaining the full picture because it omits the temporal 
>> dimension of relativity.
>>
>> Simultaneity and the LT don’t just have the same "ontological 
>> status"—they’re inseparably linked. You’re not using the LT fully if you 
>> ignore simultaneity. That’s why your method is incomplete and, yes, 
>> inferior. It’s not about preference; it’s about addressing the problem in 
>> its entirety, something you’ve repeatedly failed to do.
>>
>>
>> *They do have the same truth value. You just don't like that I am not 
>> using simultaneity; that my use of the LT is insufficiently explanatory. 
>> The key problem with invoking simultaneity is that people claim it solves 
>> the problem, but rarely if ever indicate HOW it does that. Today was the 
>> first time you were actually explicit and tried to cover this gap. To your 
>> credit you've done that by indicating exactly how the disagreement is 
>> caused by the actual changes of the events in the car frame. If you have 
>> the time and interest, I'd like to know how this is done. AG*
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Le ven. 10 janv. 2025, 10:06, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> a 
>> écrit :
>>
>>
>>
>> On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 1:52:11 AM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>> AG, your so-called "method" is inferior because it only provides half the 
>> picture. Length contraction alone establishes the conditions for 
>> disagreement but doesn’t explain why the frames differ in their 
>> conclusions. Simultaneity resolves this by showing how events are ordered 
>> differently in each frame.
>>
>> In the car frame, simultaneity ensures that the back of the car passes 
>> the entrance after the front leaves the exit, meaning the car doesn’t fit. 
>> Length contraction can’t explain this temporal ordering—it only tells you 
>> the garage appears shorter. Without simultaneity, your explanation is 
>> incomplete.
>>
>> Your insistence that length contraction alone resolves the issue is wrong.
>>
>>
>> *To be clear, I'm using the initial conditions and the LT, the latter 
>> being as firm a principle in relativity as simultaneity. As I stated in my 
>> original claim on this issue, simultaneity and the LT have the same 
>> ontological status in relativity, that is, the same truth value. So, IMO, I 
>> have explained the apparent frame disagreement using a tried and true 
>> relativistic principle, the LT. You can prefer your method, but that 
>> doesn't make my method inferior in any way. AG*
>>  
>>
>> It’s like claiming you solved a puzzle with half the pieces missing. 
>> You’re not seeing the full picture because you refuse to engage with 
>> simultaneity, the very concept that ties the disagreement together. That’s 
>> why your method is inferior.
>>
>>
>>
>> Le ven. 10 janv. 2025, 09:50, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> a 
>> écrit :
>>
>>
>>
>> On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 1:35:10 AM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>> AG, let’s clarify this once and for all since you seem intent on 
>> misrepresenting the argument. In the car frame, if the back of the car 
>> passes the entrance before the front exits the garage, then yes, the car 
>> fits in that frame. That is the definition of fitting—there is a moment 
>> when the entire car is inside the garage.
>>
>> If I wrote "before" earlier when describing the car not fitting, it was 
>> either a typo or a miscommunication. When the back passes the entrance 
>> after the front has already exited, that’s when the car doesn’t fit. This 
>> is obvious to anyone following the logic, but it seems like you’re more 
>> interested in twisting words than understanding the physics.
>>
>>
>> *I am not interested in twisting your words. I think you had a typo which 
>> implied the car fits in car frame. So, with your correction, you showed 
>> with simultaneity why the car won't in car frame. ISTM, using length 
>> contraction alone, I established the SAME result, relying on the length 
>> initial conditions, the car's frame velocity, and the LT. Why is my method 
>> inferior to yours, as I think you would claim? AG *
>>
>>
>> There’s no paradox. Simultaneity explains why the frames disagree, and 
>> the disagreement is entirely consistent with the predictions of relativity. 
>> Your attempts to confuse the matter aren’t clever—they’re just tiresome.
>>
>>
>>
>> Le ven. 10 janv. 2025, 09:29, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> a 
>> écrit :
>>
>>
>>
>> On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 1:12:47 AM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>> AG, your response is as confused as ever. The car does not fit in the car 
>> frame.
>>
>>
>> *Correct. We agree. AG*
>>  
>>
>> In the car frame, the garage is contracted, and simultaneity shifts so 
>> that the back of the car passes the entrance before the front reaches the 
>> exit. That’s literally the definition of "not fitting."
>>
>>  
>> *Sounds like fitting to me! AG *
>>
>> You’re either deliberately twisting this or you fundamentally don’t 
>> understand relativity. Length contraction sets the disagreement; 
>> simultaneity resolves it. Stop pretending you’ve uncovered some hidden 
>> truth—you haven’t.
>>
>>
>> *I'm not pretending. You wrote that the back of the car enters front of 
>> garage before the front of car exits back of garage. This seems to mean the 
>> car fits in car frame. Maybe you have a typo or a special definition. But 
>> that's what your statement seems to mean. AG*
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Le ven. 10 janv. 2025, 09:09, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> a 
>> écrit :
>>
>> On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 12:54:51 AM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>> AG, your attempt to twist this into supporting your nonsense is 
>> laughable, so let’s dismantle it piece by piece.
>>
>> The disagreement between frames is not a contradiction. It’s a 
>> consequence of relativity. The frames don’t need to agree—
>>
>>
>> *That's what I've been saying. No paradox because there's no requirement 
>> in relativity for the frames to agree. But earlier you claimed the 
>> following, that the car fits in the car frame; "In the car frame, the 
>> garage is contracted, and simultaneity shifts, so the back passes the 
>> entrance before the front reaches the exit."*
>>
>> that’s the entire point of the theory. The "paradox" is only apparent to 
>> someone who doesn’t understand why the frames differ. Simultaneity resolves 
>> the disagreement because it shows how the frames define "fitting" 
>> differently based on their relative motion.
>>
>> In the garage frame, simultaneity aligns the car’s endpoints with the 
>> garage’s endpoints at the same time, meaning the car fits. This is 
>> consistent with length contraction in this frame. In the car frame, 
>> simultaneity shifts, and the back of the car passes the entrance before the 
>> front reaches the exit, meaning the car doesn’t fit. 
>>
>>
>> *No. It means the car fits! AG*
>>  
>>
>> Both are internally consistent, and both follow directly from the Lorentz 
>> transformations.
>>
>> Your claim that this "contradicts the LT" is nonsense. The LT predicts 
>> exactly this: frame-dependent observations based on simultaneity, length 
>> contraction, and time dilation. There’s no contradiction because the LT 
>> explicitly accounts for the fact that events simultaneous in one frame are 
>> not simultaneous in another.
>>
>> Stop pretending that you’ve proven anything. All you’ve done is 
>> repeatedly fail to grasp the role simultaneity plays in resolving this 
>> so-called paradox. If you think the frames should agree, you’re clinging to 
>> a pre-relativistic worldview that has no place in this discussion. Your 
>> refusal to engage with the actual mechanics of relativity isn’t clever—it’s 
>> just ignorance on full display.
>>
>> Le ven. 10 janv. 2025, 08:50, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> a 
>> écrit :
>>
>>
>>
>> On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 12:16:52 AM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
>>
>> AG, your arrogance combined with your willful ignorance is genuinely 
>> something to behold. Let’s break it down one more time, not because you 
>> deserve the effort, but because your nonsense deserves to be dismantled.
>>
>> The so-called "paradox" exists because the two frames disagree on whether 
>> the car fits. 
>>
>>
>> *Why is this a paradox? Why must the frames agree? If it is a paradox, 
>> how does simultaneity resolve it? I asked these questions to Clark because 
>> he's more in a position to avoid emotions determining the answers. AG *
>>
>> This disagreement is a feature of relativity, not a flaw. In the garage 
>> frame, the car fits because its contracted length allows it to align with 
>> the garage’s endpoints simultaneously. In the car frame, the garage is 
>> contracted, and simultaneity shifts, so the back passes the entrance before 
>> the front reaches the exit. 
>>
>>
>> *So the car fits, contradicting the prediction of the LT where the car's 
>> length is longer than the garage. You've apparently proven what I have been 
>> claiming all along. AG*
>>  
>>
>> This difference isn’t a "false expectation" or a "non-problem"—it’s the 
>> fundamental behavior of spacetime under the Lorentz transformations. 
>>
>>
>> Your refusal to accept simultaneity’s role shows either that you’re 
>> deliberately trolling or that you fundamentally don’t understand what 
>> you’re talking about. Length contraction sets up the conditions for 
>> disagreement, but it doesn’t explain the disagreement. Simultaneity 
>> resolves it by showing why both frames arrive at different, yet internally 
>> consistent conclusions. Ignoring simultaneity is like ignoring gravity 
>> while trying to describe an orbit—it’s idiotic.
>>
>> You keep parroting that there’s no paradox, as if repeating it will make 
>> it true. The paradox isn’t about some emotional discomfort with the 
>> results; it’s about reconciling why the two frames disagree. Your 
>> suggestion that "acknowledging the frames agree" would fix this is pure 
>> drivel. If the frames agreed, it would violate the very principles of 
>> relativity you claim to understand. That’s not insight—it’s stupidity 
>> wrapped in smugness.
>>
>> Your constant attempts to downplay simultaneity while pretending to 
>> understand the LT are laughable. Simultaneity isn’t some optional 
>> detail—it’s central to how relativity works. You don’t like that? Tough. 
>> Reality doesn’t care about your preferences.
>>
>> You’ve spent this entire discussion avoiding the actual physics, throwing 
>> around insults, and pretending you’re the smartest person in the room. 
>> You’re not. You’re just loud and wrong. If you’re so desperate to avoid 
>> learning, that’s your choice, but don’t mistake your obstinance for 
>> intelligence. It’s not. It’s just sad.
>>
>>
>>
>> Le ven. 10 janv. 2025, 08:04, Alan Grayson <[email protected]> a 
>> écrit :
>>
>>
>>
>> On Thursday, January 9, 2025 at 12:53:22 PM UTC-7 John Clark wrote:
>>
>> On Thu, Jan 9, 2025 at 2:25 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> *> There is no paradox to be resolved.*
>>
>>
>> *There sure as hell is a logical paradox if you only use length 
>> contraction and ignore time dilation and the resultant disagreement about 
>> simultaneity. The garage man took a snapshot at the instant he saw BOTH the 
>> garage doors were closed, and it clearly shows the car was entirely in the 
>> garage. But the car driver also took a snapshot at the instant he saw BOTH 
>> the garage doors were closed, and it clearly shows the car had left the 
>> garage. With just length contraction you have a profound logical paradox. 
>> With length contraction AND time dilation you just have an odd situation.*
>>
>>
>> *What exactly is the paradox you allege? What is the odd situation you 
>> allege? If the car had left the garage, what exactly is the problem you 
>> find paradoxical or just odd? And if you use failure of simultaneity to 
>> resolve these questions, what result do you get? ISTM you're on a slippery 
>> slope with claims which have virtually no obvious content. As I see it, 
>> there is no paradox, just a result you find uncomfortable. Why is it 
>> uncomfortable? If you entertain what might be comfortable, you'll find 
>> something worse; the failure of the LT to make a true prediction. AG*
>>
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