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What causes relativity?
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<blockquote data-quote="NaturalPhilosopher" data-source="post: 160173" data-attributes="member: 9562"><p>For Harte: upper limit of the speed of light is only correlation..not causation.</p><p></p><p>For Einstein: just because we can't measure inertial mass directly without it deacceleration doesn't mean it doesn't exist.</p><p></p><p>remember if the higgs boson is the force responsible for giving matter mass and then speeing really fast through the higgs field adds more mass to an object but still that doesn't explain how. Like how a photon is absorbed by an electron orbit. Since most mass of the atom is in the nucleus, how does the nucleus absorb the higgs field? Obviously higgs bosons aren't electromagnetic so how?</p><p></p><p>Think we can safely assume that asymmetries in the background higgs field produce inertial and gravitational mass. Is that too much of a speculation? Is that why there is a resistance to acceleration/deacceleration?</p><p></p><p>That idea seems to violate conservation as with a boat wake, you have water in front that gathers, and then a wake behind it with less water. So, where would the symmetry be with a mass gain? Gains in one area has to be balanced by a lack in another. Is the lack(if exists) negative energy? That slows time.</p><p></p><p>Are we really witnessing two situations but through an inertial frame?</p><p></p><p>Is doppler shifting a result of the two separate inertial frames? Stuff moves towards ya and ya get blueshifting, away, red. Is that an indicator of a symmetry in the higgs boson field of a moving object?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NaturalPhilosopher, post: 160173, member: 9562"] For Harte: upper limit of the speed of light is only correlation..not causation. For Einstein: just because we can't measure inertial mass directly without it deacceleration doesn't mean it doesn't exist. remember if the higgs boson is the force responsible for giving matter mass and then speeing really fast through the higgs field adds more mass to an object but still that doesn't explain how. Like how a photon is absorbed by an electron orbit. Since most mass of the atom is in the nucleus, how does the nucleus absorb the higgs field? Obviously higgs bosons aren't electromagnetic so how? Think we can safely assume that asymmetries in the background higgs field produce inertial and gravitational mass. Is that too much of a speculation? Is that why there is a resistance to acceleration/deacceleration? That idea seems to violate conservation as with a boat wake, you have water in front that gathers, and then a wake behind it with less water. So, where would the symmetry be with a mass gain? Gains in one area has to be balanced by a lack in another. Is the lack(if exists) negative energy? That slows time. Are we really witnessing two situations but through an inertial frame? Is doppler shifting a result of the two separate inertial frames? Stuff moves towards ya and ya get blueshifting, away, red. Is that an indicator of a symmetry in the higgs boson field of a moving object? [/QUOTE]
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