Clete,
I am a certified physicist, I teach Physics for a living. I see in every post of yours a lack of the conceptual rigor that is needed to discuss theoretical physics issue.
And yet still no claim to have even read the opening post. I couldn't care less what you do for a living. All you've demonstrated by giving your resume is that you're entrenched. Your entire life is defined by and dependant upon the validity of modern main stream "science". You are, in fact, part of the problem. But since I never expected to convince you anyway, even that isn't really relevant to the topic of the thread.
Some novices can adapt quickly, but you seem not to. If you cannot see the difference between 'not existing' and 'not a material thing' after I have explained what I mean by the word 'material', then I don't see what I can offer.
I can see the difference but the context made it clear what your intent was with the original comment. You then moved the goal post. That's what nearly everyone does when confronted with an argument their worldview can't withstand.
When you are discussing a scientific topic that you have no structured education in then you should defer to the expertise of generations of very talented and educated people who devoted their lives to teasing out verifiable, testable principles and theories.
This is called an appeal to authority fallacy. Besides, in a moment you're fixing to tell me that high-schoolers can deal with Einstein's math.
In answer to your final comment, the mathematics of Special Relativity is not to difficult and can be substantially derived graphically, so that bright high schoolers can deal with it.
Yeah, sure they can. Because our public education system is so amazing that there are loads of students being taught how to graphically derive high-level mathematical ideas. Would you please give me a break?!
On other points:
* Physicists don't declare or believe that theories are a final truth, but that each new theory is a step closer to it.
It's a nice thing to say but the reality is that if you're a professional scientist who seriously questions any mainstream theory, you lose your funding, telescope time, position, reputation and your job. In effect, you get kicked out of the club if you don't tow the party line. Oh sure, you can be a rebel to a degree but to a very limited degree. You step one toe over the wrong line and the next thing you know, instead of being a college professor with a research grant and a team of undergrads to do all the tedious stuff for you, you're teaching geometry and algebra class to 9th-grade public school students in Hoboken New Jersey.
* in that light, no one believes General Relativity is the final word, and indeed as you say it is not compatible with quantum physics in particular extreme circumstances. The fact is that no experimental disagreements have ever been found.
There is no experimental anything in relation to quantum mechanics at least as it relates to gravity, which is where the real conflict exists between the two theories. Quantum gravity is fundamentally untestable and therefore scientifically meaningless.
* Quantum physics is fully compatible with Special Relativity, such that it has the title of a relativistic theory.
It all depends on the meaning of the terms used and what specific thing you're referring to. Einstein himself understood that his theory was not compatible with Quantum Mechanics. This is primarily because they deal with gravity in fundamentally different ways. One says that gravity doesn't really exist but is merely a bending of the "fabric of space-time" while the other requires the existence of gravitons. Can't be both.
That brings up a question you've made no attempt to answer (because it can't be answered)...
How can non-material space and time (i.e. space-time) be warped by and affect the trajectories of material objects? :think:
If you take a stretchy piece of spandex and stretch it over a hoop and drop a heavy mass in the middle and then toss some marbles on the sheet, they move around the center of mass in an ellipse exactly like planets around a star. But that only works because the Earth's gravity is pulling on the mass and the marbles and the spandex is pushing back against it! What in reality correlates to the spandex in the demonstration? Einstein would say that the spandex relates to space-time but how does a vacuum push on a body? We can see how spandex can push on a marble because spandex is material stuff. Space (i.e. space-time) isn't material. So what's doing the pushing? It's an effect with no cause.
It is this simple kind of critical thinking that is just totally absent in most of mainstream science in regards to certain ideas like Relativity and Evoltion and many other cosmological ideas.
* just because the evangelical drive to disprove evolution or other theories had failed does not mean they are in principle unfalsifiable.
The unfalsifiability has nothing to do with evangelicalism nor anyone's attempt to disprove the theory. It has to do with the way geologist and anthropologist and other mainstream scientists count as evidence and with how they deal with contrary evidence. There is fundamentally no way to even test the theory, never mind falsify it.
Finding rabbit bones in Jurassic deposits would do it.
No, it wouldn't! That's just the exact point! It should, but it absolutely would not move mainstream science one solitary inch off of the theory of evolution. All they would do is find some way for the problem to go away. The rabbit bones would be assumed to be something other than a rabbit or they'd find some way to suggest that the Jurassic layer in that spot had some been exposed to later epochs or whatever convoluted idea someone had to come up with to explain away the contrary evidence.
The finding of soft tissue is T-Rex (and other dinosaurs) is just such a perfect example. Before they found soft tissue, its existence was impossible. They found it. Was it even considered possible that the bones weren't as old as they thought? NOPE! Not for one single second. Instead, the first even slightly plausible idea that can be used to explain how soft tissue can last for millions of years will be hailed as a brilliant explanation and the theory of evolution, as well as geological uniformitarianism, remain the untouched and untouchable dogma that they've been for longer than either of us have been alive.
The speed of light constancy could be falsified by adopting a physical length metric and showing that it disagrees with the light based one in specified conditions. Theory says they should always agree - falsifiability right there.
I agree that the idea is falsifiable in principle but it isn't in practice. They have literally defined both the meter and the second in terms of the speed of light. The meter is defined as 1/299,792,458 of the distance that light travels in one second and the second is derived from the radioactivity of cesium 133 atoms which is a relativistic process. They have built the constancy of the speed of light into the calculation.
As for measuring it by totally different means, that has been done and guess what - it's not as constant as you think it is. In fact, the history of the debate about the constancy of the speed of light is a fascinating case study in just the sort of stuck in the mud, tow the party line, politically motivated, entrenched thinking that has existed in mainstream science for over a century. Today, because of the internet, some of that is beginning to break down, however. There are actually new theories that state explicitly that the speed of light has not only decayed but that it was infinite at one time and that it seems to decay in a quantum fashion (e.g. red shift, instead of smoothly increasing as one goes through space, it jumps from one plateau to another (See W. G. Tifft, Astrophysical Journal , 206:38-56, (1976) and confirmation by T. Beardsley, Scientific American 267:6 (1992), p. 19 and elsewhere)).
More modern theories that do away with comic inflation with a variable speed of light are actually seeing the light of day in mainstream scientific circles which is very surprising. But, as I said, the internet makes it easier to get your ideas out there and it makes it harder to shut people up. It won't be long before the problems inherent in modern cosmological theories are common knowledge and the emperors of modern mathematics based physics will be shown to far fewer clothes on.
Sometimes, Clete, you just have to accept that the continued lack of disproof of these theories is that that are generally correct.
Not when they are fundamentally untestable or have evolved into unfalsifiable religions.
One last thought to get things back on the topic of the thread and since you asked about Einstein's thought experiments...
Einstien's theories were born out of the idea that if you move away from a clock then the hands seem to slow down the faster you go and that they would seem to stop when you reached the speed of light because you're moving along with the light that reflected off the face of the clock at a specific time. The clock would continue to tick along just fine for those at rest relative to the clock but for you, it would appear to stop.
That's it! That is, in a nutshell, the whole idea. Notice that it is talking about CLOCKS not time!
Now, I understand that Einstein's theories are more robust than that, by far but that isn't the point. The point is, at bottom, Relativity is about clocks rather than time. The conflation of clocks with time (and space) is arbitrary and unfounded. It isn't a thought experiment as much as it is a day dream.
Clete