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Conventionality in the Axiomatic Foundations of the Special Theory of Relativity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2022

Bas C. van Fraassen*
Affiliation:
Yale University and Indiana University

Abstract

In this paper we examine Ellis and Bowman's argument, that simultaneity in inertial frames of reference is not conventional, from the axiomatic point of view. In Part I we examine the role of conventions in an axiomatic physical theory, and in Part II the relation of simultaneity in Reichenbach's axiomatization of the space-time theory of special relativity.

Type
A Panel Discussion of Simultaneity By Slow Clock Transport in The Special and General Theories of Relativity
Copyright
Copyright © 1969 by The Philosophy of Science Association

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References

[1] Ellis, B. and Bowman, P., “Conventionality in distant simultaneity,” Philosophy of Science, vol. 34, 1967, pp. 116136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[2] Poincaré, H. The Value of Science, Dover, New York, 1958.Google Scholar
[3] Reichenbach, H., The Philosophy of Space and Time, Dover, New York, 1958.Google Scholar
[4] van Fraassen, B., An Introduction to the Philosophy of Time and Space, Random House, New York, forthcoming (1969).Google Scholar