Abandoned Character
(he./him)
- Mar 24, 2023
- 261
So I have a project that has been eating away at my soul for the better part of two, almost three, years. I have to write a report that essentially summarizes the basics of general relativity and its philosophical and historical foundations.
If there is anyone else out there that enjoys learning about physics can maybe help me by engaging in a dialogue about the subject. You see, I'm finding it incredibly hard to write by myself and I figure maybe a dialogue would help get my thoughts out of my brain.
For the sake of the layman, I'll give an intro to the topic at hand: Formulated in 1915, General Relativity is the product of Albert Einstein's decade long investigation of the nature of gravity, which lead him to a deep insight regarding both space and time. You may be familiar with the term space-time, which is described exactly as you would expect--the unification of what we percieve to be space and what we percieve to be time.
You may have heard of special relativity, which Einstein formulated well before the general counterpart. The key differences between the two is that special relativity is only concerned with geometrically flat spacetime (spacetime having a geometry is a crazy concept to grasp, but I believe anybody can understand it), whereas general relativity is concerned with flat and curved geometries (such as the discussion of distant light bending around our sun).
Of course, there are limitations to the theory as often emphasized when trying to understand very very small phenomona. This part is a weak spot of mine, as I do not have a super good understanding of why general relativity fails to describe quantum phenomona. The most I can say is that general relativity seeks to create a continuum of spacetime, where as quantum theory chops up reality into very discrete bits.
There are also several other theories of gravity that look to describe what general relativity fails to do. Of particular interest to me is Julian Barbour's construction of Shape Dynamics, which takes the fundamental relations of shape and geometry and makes them the only thing to consider. Barbour does a great job at identifying the failure of general relativity by discussing reference frames and, in particular, inertial reference frames and the ultimate non-inertial reference frame. (My understanding here is a bit watery so it makes sense if this does not click to you, I need to refine this part for myself)
Anyway, I've kind of word-vomitted here. Please let me know if something confuses you, or you have a question, or something fun to add. Whatever it is, I am happy to hear. Thanks.
If there is anyone else out there that enjoys learning about physics can maybe help me by engaging in a dialogue about the subject. You see, I'm finding it incredibly hard to write by myself and I figure maybe a dialogue would help get my thoughts out of my brain.
For the sake of the layman, I'll give an intro to the topic at hand: Formulated in 1915, General Relativity is the product of Albert Einstein's decade long investigation of the nature of gravity, which lead him to a deep insight regarding both space and time. You may be familiar with the term space-time, which is described exactly as you would expect--the unification of what we percieve to be space and what we percieve to be time.
You may have heard of special relativity, which Einstein formulated well before the general counterpart. The key differences between the two is that special relativity is only concerned with geometrically flat spacetime (spacetime having a geometry is a crazy concept to grasp, but I believe anybody can understand it), whereas general relativity is concerned with flat and curved geometries (such as the discussion of distant light bending around our sun).
Of course, there are limitations to the theory as often emphasized when trying to understand very very small phenomona. This part is a weak spot of mine, as I do not have a super good understanding of why general relativity fails to describe quantum phenomona. The most I can say is that general relativity seeks to create a continuum of spacetime, where as quantum theory chops up reality into very discrete bits.
There are also several other theories of gravity that look to describe what general relativity fails to do. Of particular interest to me is Julian Barbour's construction of Shape Dynamics, which takes the fundamental relations of shape and geometry and makes them the only thing to consider. Barbour does a great job at identifying the failure of general relativity by discussing reference frames and, in particular, inertial reference frames and the ultimate non-inertial reference frame. (My understanding here is a bit watery so it makes sense if this does not click to you, I need to refine this part for myself)
Anyway, I've kind of word-vomitted here. Please let me know if something confuses you, or you have a question, or something fun to add. Whatever it is, I am happy to hear. Thanks.