Discussion:
Teaching Einstein's 1905 Constant-Speed-of-Light Falsehood
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Pentcho Valev
2023-05-17 08:38:21 UTC
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Einstein's 1905 constant-speed-of-light falsehood is imposed on physics students just as uncompromisingly as the name Bingo the Clowno is imposed on the dude in this video:



On graduation, each physics student gets the name Bingo the Einsteiniano: Loading Image...

Example:

Professor Joe Wolfe: "At this stage, many of my students say things like "The invariance of the speed of light among observers is impossible" or "I can't understand it". Well, it's not impossible. It's even more than possible, it is true. This is something that has been extensively measured, and many refinements to the Michelson and Morley experiment, and complementary experiments have confirmed this invariance to very great precision. As to understanding it, there isn't really much to understand. However surprising and weird it may be, it is the case. It's the law in our universe. The fact of the invariance of c doesn't take much understanding." https://newt.phys.unsw.edu.au/einsteinlight/jw/module3_weird_logic.htm

Pentcho Valev https://twitter.com/pentcho_valev
Pentcho Valev
2023-05-17 20:37:28 UTC
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Brian Greene teaches Einstein's constant-speed-of-light falsehood:



The brainwasher would never tell the audience that, as Gracie runs towards or away from George with speed v, she measures a frequency shift from f=c/λ to f'=(c±v)/λ. Why is Greene silent about the frequency shift? Because the frequency shift obviously entails a speed-of-light shift from c to c'=c±v:

"The Doppler effect is the shift in frequency of a wave that occurs when the wave source, or the detector of the wave, is moving. Applications of the Doppler effect range from medical tests using ultrasound to radar detectors and astronomy (with electromagnetic waves)...Moving Observer. Let's say you, the observer, now move toward the source with velocity Vo. You encounter more waves per unit time than you did before. Relative to you, the waves travel at a higher speed: V' = V+Vo. The frequency of the waves you detect is higher, and is given by: f' = V'/λ = (V+Vo)/λ." http://physics.bu.edu/~redner/211-sp06/class19/class19_doppler.html

Pentcho Valev https://twitter.com/pentcho_valev

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