I'm not sure what you're interpreting upon me here. I already interpret the spacetime in a similar way as Einstein with regards to the geometric descriptions. It is the particular relationship to reality that I question. It is the interpretations of the maps, not the maps themselves.nix wrote:Scott Mayers wrote: In reality the best map coincides with the reality itself.
To say the curvature of spacetime is just a perspective which could be removed by adding a dimension, is to ignore the fact that we are physical beings 'embedded' in three space and one time dimensions. What we measure with our meter sticks and clocks is the 4-D spacetime. The curvature or otherwise of this spacetime is then a question which can be determined empirically and has been by experiments such as gravitational redshifts, gravitational lensing, and the direct determinations of the rates of atomic clocks in different gravitational fields (differential aging of twins in different gravity). In the latter experiments the clocks start off together and are identical, they are then moved to locations with different gravitational fields and later are brought back together. The clock in the higher gravitational field actually ages less than the other in accordance with the general theory of relativity.
I can prove the trouble with these interpretations easily. They do NOT dismiss the results of the findings of the experiments. The experiments err in their presumption that they uniquely support certain past scientists' views. I'm aware of the experiments you mentioned. But these still follow on a different interpretation of my own. I gave one such example to Obvious Leo in "Does Science have limitations?". There, for example, I showed how the it is an error to assume that you really CAN determine whether you are in an elevator or not. One such means is to measure the damage done to the device, like a clock, or a person who has traveled in these different realms. The one traveling in a vector direction moves through an real absolute space and is subject to more radiation than one merely accelerating as they move through the background only at the speed of Earth rotation, the speed of the Earth going around the sun, etc. One accelerating away from Earth is thrust through this. The age factor still appears true of a clock or person, but this slow down of apparent time is actually due to the very fact that all atom of each thing measuring something in acceleration or fixed velocity through space moves through this background limiting the actual potential of these things to function in the same way as the Earth. That is, time itself does not slow down, only the perception of it. This mistake interprets space itself as unfixed or relative. My example demonstrates the error.