Page:The principle of relativity (1920).djvu/23

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of the platform. The present difficulty cannot he solved by any further alteration in the measure of space. The only recourse left open is to alter the measure of time as well, that is, to adopt the concept of "local time." If a moving clock goes slower so that one 'real' second becomes 1/β second as measured in the moving system, the velocity of light relative to the platform will always remain c. We must adopt two very startling hypotheses, namely, the Fitz-Gerald contraction and the concept of "local time," in order to give a satisfactory explanation of the Michelson-Morley experiment.

These results were already reached by Lorentz in the course of further developments of his electron theory. Lorentz used a special set of transformation equations[1] for time which implicitly introduced the concept of local time. But he himself failed to attach any special significance to it, and looked upon it rather as a mere mathematical artifice like imaginary quantities in analysis or the circle at infinity in projective geometry. The originality of Einstein at this stage consists in his successful physical interpretation of these results, and viewing them as the coherent organised consequences of a single general principle. Lorentz established the Relativity Theorem[2] (consisting merely of a set of transformation equations) while Einstein generalised it into a Universal Principle. In addition Einstein introduced fundamentally new concepts of space and time, which served to destroy old fetishes and demanded a wholesale revision of scientific concepts and thus opened up new possibilities in the synthetic unification of natural processes.

Newton had framed his laws of motion in such a way as to make them quite independent of the absolute velocity

  1. See Note 2.
  2. See Note 4.