Johnny said:
Not really.
A) No one has stepped forward and told me what the qualitative difference between measured time and time itself is.
Time "itself" does not exist. What we call time is simply duration and sequence. Clocks measure both. Something I've said about a thousand times.
B) No one has explained why empirically we should assume some sort of absolute time when all frames are relative.
It is only the measurement of time that is relative. Nothing else has ever been demonstrated. Something I've also said about a thousand times, which you will now deny.
C) No one has explained the affects of relativity and why we are to believe that it is only illusitory. If clocks measure time and clocks show the effects of relativity, why are we to assume that relativity only affected clocks and not time itself. Remember, I'm not just talking about mechanical clocks. Any process that is a function of time is affected (be it the duration between each breath or the duration between decaying atoms.
The duration between breaths or between decaying atoms are nothing but another sort of clock. There is simply nothing you can point to that is time "itself" everything you bring up will be nothing but another clock. Relativity is about the effects that velocity (including the sort we refer to as the force of gravity) has on clocks not on time. Time "itself" does not exist. And yes, this too is a point I have made so many times it makes me want to throw up.
E) No one has explained how to measure absolute time.
I do not believe that WE can measure it. God and possibly the angels could because they would have access to something that would give them an absolutely standardized set of events by which to compare all other events that occur. In effect God could create a perfect clock, a feat outside our capability. But even at this, it is not measuring something that exists "itself". Time is nothing more than a comparison of one set of events relative to another. The only way to have what might be called "absolute time" is to have a perfectly reliable, absolutely unalterable set of standard events to compare all other events too; in effect a perfect clock.
Okay, I admit it, this point is a new one; I don't think I've ever made this point at all on any thread, ever. I can hardly believe it!
The only thing the opening post did was highlight a misunderstanding of general relativity.
Don't be so smug. You don't know any more about relativity than Bob does.
The only thing most subsequent posts have done is to repeat things in the first post.
Yeah. Thus the remark about being redundant.
In reality, the issue is not at rest, at least not in your camp. It's at rest with the physicists of the world.
This is hardly true. There are dozens of theories out there that reinterpret Einstein's math and Relativity in general including the experimental data. Einstein is far from having been proven correct.
It has been demonstrated experimentally hundreds of times in different ways. You all have a lot of questions to answer, some that might interest some of the most intelligent men of our time that must have overlooked your musings.
You think we are the first to ask these questions? You give us more credit than we deserve and display your ignorance in so doing.
Resting in Him,
Clete