Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 Review of Moritz Schlick's General Theory of Knowledge
- 2 Einstein's Theory of Space
- 3 Reply to H. Dingler's Critique of the Theory of Relativity
- 4 A Report on an Axiomatization of Einstein's Theory of Space-Time
- 5 Reply to Th. Wulf's Objections to the General Theory of Relativity
- 6 Einstein's Theory of Motion
- 7 The Theory of Relativity and Absolute Transport Time
- 8 Reply to Anderson's Objections to the General Theory of Relativity
- 9 Review of Aloys Müller's The Philosophical Problems with Einstein's Theory of Relativity
- 10 The Philosophical Significance of the Theory of Relativity
- 11 Planet Clocks and Einsteinian Simultaneity
- 12 On the Physical Consequences of the Axiomatization of Relativity
- 13 Has the Theory of Relativity Been Refuted?
- 14 Response to a Publication of Mr. Hj. Mellin
- Index
14 - Response to a Publication of Mr. Hj. Mellin
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 Review of Moritz Schlick's General Theory of Knowledge
- 2 Einstein's Theory of Space
- 3 Reply to H. Dingler's Critique of the Theory of Relativity
- 4 A Report on an Axiomatization of Einstein's Theory of Space-Time
- 5 Reply to Th. Wulf's Objections to the General Theory of Relativity
- 6 Einstein's Theory of Motion
- 7 The Theory of Relativity and Absolute Transport Time
- 8 Reply to Anderson's Objections to the General Theory of Relativity
- 9 Review of Aloys Müller's The Philosophical Problems with Einstein's Theory of Relativity
- 10 The Philosophical Significance of the Theory of Relativity
- 11 Planet Clocks and Einsteinian Simultaneity
- 12 On the Physical Consequences of the Axiomatization of Relativity
- 13 Has the Theory of Relativity Been Refuted?
- 14 Response to a Publication of Mr. Hj. Mellin
- Index
Summary
1. Mathematics and reality. 2. Time order. 3. Simultaneity. 4. Uniformity.
Recently, Hj. Mellin, in a lengthy examination, offered a critique of my Axiomatization of the Theory of Relativity. A discussion of the objections that Mellin raises to my axiomatization, and thereby to the theory of relativity, seem to me to serve the general interest because of their fundamental nature and his clear formulation of views which are most often only operative on a subconscious level, and I would therefore like to answer them here.
The most significant difference in our positions lies in our understandings of the relationship between the mathematical discipline of geometry and reality. Here, I adopt the perspective (which is often incorrectly termed conventionalism) that the geometrical axioms as mathematical propositions are not at all descriptive of reality; this only occurs when physical things are shown to be coordinated to the elements of geometry (coordinative definitions). If we take very small bits of mass to be points, light rays to be straight lines, and the length of a segment to be determined by the repeated placement of a rigid rod, then the statement that straight lines are the shortest becomes an (empirically proven) statement about real things. Without such coordinative definitions, these propositions say nothing about reality. Mellin's objections to this view rest on his stressing the so- called intuitive necessity of the geometric axioms.
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- Defending EinsteinHans Reichenbach's Writings on Space, Time and Motion, pp. 205 - 214Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006