On Friday, March 31, 2023 at 1:29:39 PM UTC-6, Gerald Kelleher wrote:
It would be exceptional if an individual, other than myself, had a firm grasp on what is being presented so that while mathematical or experimental theorists are determined to avoid the new framework through which
timekeeping and planetary dynamics are combined by means of a tracking satellite, that avoidance cannot last.
If your insights are such that they cannot be effectively communicated to another living being, then indeed avoiding them may last for a very long
time.
The ideas that I see you presenting are the following:
- The Solar System should be understood from a hierarchical
standpoint. That is, the rotation of the Earth should be understood
in relation to its orbit around the Sun (so that 24 hours, the length
of a day, is also understood as the Earth's rotational period) and
that of the Moon should be understood in relation to its orbit around
the Earth (so that it is seen that the Moon *does not* rotate, as it
keeps one face always towards the Earth).
- The motions of the bodies of the Solar System are to be
understood by means of a narrative and interpretive framework,
not by empiricism and mathematics.
- Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler were the titans who gave us a
correct understanding of the Solar System; Newton, however,
put astronomy on the wrong foot, from which it has not since
recovered.
I regard these views, needless to say, as the veriest nonsense.
It isn't just that I am so steeped in the Newtonian world-view as
to unreasonably favor it; it is because I _understand_ it that I know
it is self-consistent, and it is a powerful tool for explaining what the
Solar System does.
And so I see how the Equation of Time shows the Earth does have
a _uniform_ rotation with a period of 23 hours, 56 minutes, and 4
seconds - barring tiny corrections accounted for by real physical
causes - with the 24 hour day being simply an average of the result
of that rotation's interaction with the Earth's orbit.
And how the Moon's libration in longitude similarly shows that the
Moon truly does rotate, and that rotation, as well, is properly measured
with respect to the fixed stars (that being an "inertial frame", as they
say in Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity, which, of course, you also dismiss).
And then there's the amazing achievement of predicting the orbit of
Neptune from the perturbations of Uranus. Which would never have
happened if Newton's view of the Solar System as consisting of
big lumps of rock that move under universal gravitation following the
same rules as govern the flight of cannonballs in Earth's gravity was
not the simple and exact truth.
Nonsense can be memorized by rote, but it cannot be truly understood.
That is the root cause of your failure to communicate your insights,
such as they are. Only by realizing, and admitting to yourself, that you
are mistaken is there any hope for you to make genuine progress in understanding and explaining the motions of the bodies in the Solar
System.
It is Newton whose great achievements took the Copernican system
from merely one debatable point of view to a hard fact which was beyond
any debate or argument; it was Newton who achieved the dream of
Kepler to explain the causes behind such things as the orbits of planets
being ellipses. It was Newton who followed the methods of Galileo, and
brought them to their full conclusion and fruition.
To deny Newton is to turn one's back on Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler.
And this is what you have done. Your every post is a mockery of the achievements of Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler, who you profess to
revere.
John Savard
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