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Time Travel Discussion
Does Gravity Really Bend Light?
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<blockquote data-quote="darwi" data-source="post: 96591" data-attributes="member: 6291"><p>Einstein, Some of the others may have degrees(in physics even), but you seem like the better observer. I feel the problem is they don't really understand about the 'aether', something that scientists were beginning to understand in Victorian times, including Albert Einstein. Unfortunately, he didn't include it properly in his theory of Relativity. But all this is before their time. Can aether be more concentrated, like in a 'black hole'? Doesn't the concentration of the aether, as light and other things pass through, have something to do with the lensing effect that you wrote about? And the gravitic effect is also connected to that same aether, but not as a force, I agree. Light and other things are forcing their way through the aether, with a turning effect, but space is not curved. The aether is just sitting there, stationary, till something moves through it. So perhaps we're seeing the way aether becomes more and less concentrated as things pass through it. I realize the newcomers are using the expressions dark matter and dark energy these days, rather than aether.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="darwi, post: 96591, member: 6291"] Einstein, Some of the others may have degrees(in physics even), but you seem like the better observer. I feel the problem is they don't really understand about the 'aether', something that scientists were beginning to understand in Victorian times, including Albert Einstein. Unfortunately, he didn't include it properly in his theory of Relativity. But all this is before their time. Can aether be more concentrated, like in a 'black hole'? Doesn't the concentration of the aether, as light and other things pass through, have something to do with the lensing effect that you wrote about? And the gravitic effect is also connected to that same aether, but not as a force, I agree. Light and other things are forcing their way through the aether, with a turning effect, but space is not curved. The aether is just sitting there, stationary, till something moves through it. So perhaps we're seeing the way aether becomes more and less concentrated as things pass through it. I realize the newcomers are using the expressions dark matter and dark energy these days, rather than aether. [/QUOTE]
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Does Gravity Really Bend Light?
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