T
thinkandmull
Guest
It makes me dizzy to think that the shortest distance between two points is not a straight line except in pure hypothetical mathematics
Regarding the bolded portion: it is very unlikely that Einstein would have “believed” that, in the sense of saying that in some absolute sense the earth is moving and the object is not. More likely, he would have said that one conception is just as valid as the other.Geocentrists like to quote Einstein as saying that it doesn’t matter whether you say the earth revolves around the sun or vice verse. General relativity makes it relative/irrelevant. According to videos I’ve seen, Einstein believed that when you drop something the earth goes up to the object instead of the object going down, and this based on GR. But if I drop something on one side of the earth and someone drops something on the other side of the earth, which way will the earth go? This is so confusing for me. Is science/physics getting into the realm where lay people can’t even understand it anymore? Take non-Euclidean geometry. Is this saying there is no straight lines on a table? I have never understood why non-Euclidean geometry has been used at all
Imagine that we were 2d dots living on a piece of paper. Life would be different based on whether that paper was rolled up (just bent up at the edges, rolled into a tube, donut, saddle shape, etc) or not. We can’t imagine rolling 3d space through 4d, but it’s a similar idea.Does anyone claim to understand what curved space even means?