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The vindication of Lorentz
pp. 105-126
Résumé
In Newton's view absolute time, God's time, is the seat of temporal becoming and objective tense. The A-theorist may concur with Newton on this point, seeing SR as nothing more than a theory about relative time, that is, our physical measures of time. But how, then, does A-theoretic time connect with physical time? Given our rejection of the relativity interpretation of SR, it follows from the reality of tense that a Lorentzian theory of relativity is correct after all. The A-theorist may plausibly contend that that reference frame whose associated time coincides with and thus constitutes the measure of metaphysical time is thereby privileged and that the familiar relativistic phenomena are the result of motion relative to this frame.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Craig William Lane (2000) The tenseless theory of time: a critical examination. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 105-126
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-3473-8_5
Citation complète:
Craig William Lane, 2000, The vindication of Lorentz. In W.L. Craig The tenseless theory of time (105-126). Dordrecht, Springer.