Page:Eddington A. Space Time and Gravitation. 1920.djvu/50

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34
RELATIVITY
[CH.

angle and would expand and the other two sides contract—in his judgment. For us, the lengths of and are equal; for him, one length is twice the other. Clearly length cannot be a property inherent in our drawing; it needs the specification of some observer.

We have seen further that duration of time also requires that an observer should be specified. The stationary observer and the aviator disagreed as to whose cigar lasted the longer time.

Thus length and duration are not things inherent in the external world; they are relations of things in the external world to some specified observer. If we grasp this all the mystery disappears from the phenomena described in Chapter i. When the rod in the Michelson-Morley experiment is turned through a right angle it contracts; that naturally gives the impression that something has happened to the rod itself. Nothing whatever has happened to the rod—the object in the external world. Its length has altered, but length is not an intrinsic property of the rod, since it is quite indeterminate until some observer is specified. Turning the rod through a right angle has altered the relation to the observer (implied in the discussion of the experiment); but the rod itself, or the relation of a molecule at one end to a molecule at the other, is unchanged. Measurement of length and duration is a comparison with partitions of space and time drawn by the observer concerned, with the help of apparatus which shares his motion. Nature is not concerned with these partitions; it has, as we shall see later, a geometry of its own which is of a different type.

Current physics has hitherto assumed that all observers are not to be regarded as on the same footing, and that there is some absolute observer whose judgments of length and duration are to be treated with respect, because nature pays attention to his space-time partitions. He is supposed to be at rest in the aether, and the aether materialises his space-partitions so that they have a real significance in the external world. This is sheer hypothesis, and we shall find it is unsupported by any facts. Evidently our proper course is to pursue our investigations, and call in this hypothetical observer only if we find there is something which he can help to explain.

We have been leading up from the older physics to the new