Page:Eddington A. Space Time and Gravitation. 1920.djvu/27

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WHAT IS GEOMETRY?
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experience, which is a very different thing, since experience is very limited.

Phys. I cannot imagine myself perceiving non-Euclidean space!

Math. Look at the reflection of the room in a polished doorknob, and imagine yourself one of the actors in what you see going on there.

Rel. I have another point to raise. The distance between two points is to be the length measured with a rigid scale. Let us mark the two points by particles of matter, because we must somehow identify them by reference to material objects. For simplicity we shall suppose that the two particles have no relative motion, so that the distance—whatever it is—remains constant. Now you will probably agree that there is no such thing as absolute motion; consequently there is no standard condition of the scale which we can call "at rest." We may measure with the scale moving in any way we choose, and if results for different motions disagree, there is no criterion for selecting the true one. Further, if the particles are sliding past the scale, it makes all the difference what instants we choose for making the two readings.

Phys. You can avoid that by defining distance as the measurement made with a scale which has the same velocity as the two points. Then they will always be in contact with two particular divisions of the scale.

Rel. A very sound definition; but unfortunately it does not agree with the meaning of distance in general use. When the relativist wishes to refer to this length, he calls it the proper-length; in non-relativity physics it does not seem to have been used at all. You see it is not convenient to send your apparatus hurling through the laboratory—after a pair of α particles, for example. And you could scarcely measure the length of a wave of light by this convention.[1] So the physicist refers his lengths to apparatus at rest on the earth; and the mathematician starts with the words "Choose unaccelerated rectangular axes , , ,…" and assumes that the measuring-scales are at rest relatively to these axes. So when the term length is used some arbitrary standard motion of the measuring apparatus must always be implied.

  1. The proper length of a light-wave is actually infinite.