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inkbottle

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  1. About the time this entry was written I had just invented a mechanical/optical device that would, if placed in an enclosed windowless laboratory be able to detect absolute motion. The strange thing is that for three years nobody has shown any interest it. A Professor at Manchester Uni confirmed in a letter that it would "definitely work". Can anybody say why there is this lack of interest? Inkbottle
  2. Hi Geryllax Vu,

    You say in your entry for 29th June 2013 that the first postulate of Einstein in his Special Theory of Relativity states "there is no experiment that can be performed in an enclosed laboratory that can detect absolute motion"

    About three years ago I invented a mechanical/optical device that measures absolute motion, it's very simple and a Professor at Manchester Uni said in a letter that the idea definitely works, it requires no information coming in from outside BUT nobody I have approached has shown any interest. Please can you explain why there is this lack of interest in what I think is a major step forward in physics.

     Regards Tony aka inkbottle

    1. Cornelius Varley

      Cornelius Varley

      It might be better to post your comment in the comments section of that particular entry 

       

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