ABSTRACT

"Relativity In our Time" is a book concerning the relevance of Einstein's theory to human relations in contemporary times. lt is physics and it is philosophy. lt is a discussion about one of the greatest of all pillars of 20th century thought and science. Based on a seminar course for a mixture of science and humanities students, the approach and narrative style leads the reader towards the frontier of thinking in this farreaching subject. Sachs deals with the whole spread of relativity, starting from the early history of Galileo and Faraday, he arrives at the foundation of the special theory. There is a logical transition to the general theory while the last part of the book covers the mind-testing realms of unified field theory, Mach's principle and cosmology. The book begins with atomistic, deterministic, classical physics and goes on towards a view of continuous fields of matter and a clearer view of spacetime. The reader is led into Einstein's extension of this theory towards a unified force field; consequently the authors address the issue of the validity of linear mathematics compared with the realism of a non- linear universe.; Such arguments today are leading towards a new paradigm in science - a study and description of nonlinear natural systems especially far from equilibrium systems; their energetics and dynamics. This book should be of value to postgraduates, undergraduates, secondary students and professionals in physics and philosophy and anyone with an interest in science subjects.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|5 pages

Early observations of things

chapter 4|6 pages

Toward an abstract view of nature

chapter 5|5 pages

Einstein’s ideas of special relativity

chapter 6|8 pages

Space

chapter 7|8 pages

Time

chapter 8|5 pages

Space-time

chapter 11|4 pages

On the Fitzgerald-Lorentz contraction

chapter 12|8 pages

Relative time and the twin paradox

chapter 15|4 pages

The continuous field concept in relativity

chapter 16|7 pages

The Mach principle

chapter 18|7 pages

The curvature of space-time

chapter 20|6 pages

Faraday’s unified field concept

chapter 21|6 pages

Einstein’s unified field concept

chapter 22|6 pages

The night sky

chapter 23|14 pages

Cosmology