fmdog44
Well-known Member
- Location
- Houston, Texas
"A single event in the same place at different locations."
Yes."A single event in the same place at different locations."
Of course, the observer influences the observed and that must be accounted for. What a truly wacky world we live in and it is clear to me that we don't understand even a tiny piece of it yet!Are you referring to Einstein’s Relativity of Simultaneity theory? In physics, the relativity of simultaneity is the concept that distant simultaneity…whether two spatially separated events occur at the same time… is not absolute, but depends on the observer's reference frame.
If we look back through history, we realize that whatever was discovered during any given period of time, was described in terms limited by what we knew, with so much more we didn't know. Once again, we don't know what we don't know. So whatever terms are being used today to describe observations in the quantum fields, will probably change and broaden, and even possibly become more accurate many years in the future as more discoveries are made that change our interpretations of observed phenomenon."A miracle perhaps"?, (that would fit wouldn't it).
Sometimes words are used to confuse us, whilst drawing attention to an event or other, (maybe, beyond the quantum physics explanation, there is another we're missing?).![]()
Example: Single event: Smiling."A single event in the same place at different locations."
You're starting to get itExample: Single event: Smiling.
Joe is smiling in Florida in his kitchen, i.e. (one location)
Jim is smiling in Ohio in his kitchen, i.e. (second location.)
The speed of light."A single event in the same place at different locations."
What is the source of this quote?A single event in the same place at different locations."