Difference between revisions of "The Limimting Nature of Light-Velocity as the Casual Factor Underlying Relativity"

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[[Category:Relativity|limimting nature light-velocity casual factor underlying relativity]]

Latest revision as of 20:03, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title The Limimting Nature of Light-Velocity as the Casual Factor Underlying Relativity
Author(s) Trevor Morris
Keywords light-velocity, relativity, ether, superfluous
Published 1994
Journal None
Pages 203-208

Abstract

THE ETHER: ED HOC OR SUPERFLUOUS?

It is commonly accepted that Einstein's 1905 paper setting out the Special Theory of Relativity was a turning-point, and his approach has entirely displaced the earlier one developed by Lorentz (1892, 1904) and Poincare (1904). Two main reasons for this preference are usually given:

  1. Einstein's version is more economical because it makes a preferred frame of reference, the ether, "superfluous" (Einstein, 1905; Jeans, 1925).
  2. The Lorentz-Poincare approach is not satisfactory anyway because its basic postulation of the FitzGerald-Lorentz contraction was ad hoc.