Seedling
Well-Known Member
Wait, how do you know this? I've already asked you once. This was your reply:
Now can the women on the train not make the exact same argument?
In scenario B (the second set of strikes)
She is midway between the front and back of the train. She observes simultaneous lighting strikes at the front and back. She is equal distance from both front and back, so she concludes that SHE is the one at absolute rest. She never accelerated or decelerated, therefore she has always been at absolute rest.
If the radius of the light spheres were the same when they impacted her simultaneously at the midpoint then the time of light travel was the same, and the distances were the same, so yes, she would be at an absolute zero velocity. If she was in relative motion to the tracks then the tracks would have a velocity greater than zero. That is not the situation though, I explained that the tracks were at a zero velocity in the first scenario, and you said he ran down to the next platform and stood there (presumably at the midpoint.) That would put him at a zero velocity, and if the strikes impacted him at different times then the strikes occurred at different times. That means that the train lady is wrong to say that she was midpoint of the points of origin of the spheres when the lights impacted her.