From: Thomas Garcia
Hello, Nobody, let me just say I am truly grateful to you for your part in this discussion. You make excellent points that I'm sure others would ask if they dared. I will try to respond in the clearest way I know. First, this riddle has been around since Man came out from the caves, I believe, so you are right - this stuff is tricky indeed.
Your example of equal-speed objects may be correct, and I address that in my essay in stating that all objects in motion at the same speed within the universe will have the same time rates regardless of location. If we include the earth's spin and its curvature, however, the speed of the train increases.
I mentioned my observers do not see each other's clock to emphasize that is not necessary for the success of the experiment. Your point about "reciprocal time dilation," well known in the Twin Paradox, is not applicable to the train experiment without fundamentally changing it as you say. In the TP, there are instances when the speed of both twins will match each other, but at other times, they will not. At the times when their speeds are equal, there is no "time dilation." Otherwise, SR's premise holds. In order to invalidate SR's "time dilation," you must first show that the result of the train experiment is false. I have been unable to do that.
About your diagram, in order for the "passing clock" to pass the others, it must have a higher speed, thus that clock will show, correctly, a slower time rate. The falseness, if any, may lie in the claim that the others would also see the passing clock as moving slower in time. I am unconvinced either way.
I mentioned that all objects are in motion because you seemed to not take that into consideration, which is a necessity for your diagram. However, I certainly agree there can exist objects without motion in our universe. In fact, I wrote an essay on that years ago, titled "The Ether Found," which I am revising now so that I can post it in the forum here for comments pro and con.
Insofar as SR initiated the invention of the two thought experiments in my essay, which show without exception that time varies in the physical world when speeds between two or more objects vary, and which have not yet been invalidated, SR cannot be ignored as the source of so-called time dilation.
I am indeed speaking of a physical real time, but you claim that violates SR's rejection of absolute motion!?! SR rejects the theory of absolute time, and yet half of the world's population believes time is a power imposed equally onto all things in the universe, including space, and the other half believes space-time is a real physical place. My essay also rejects absolute time in my insistence that time is a property of individual objects.
Absolute or relative speed? My reference is to relative speed (between objects) as it affects their time rates. If by absolute speed you mean an object's specific speed in space, my reference then is to a speed vs time spectrum similar to the light spectrum. Such a chart would have times rates accruing to objects at every speed.
Wikipedia defines a physical property as "any property that is measurable whose value describes a physical system's state." Time sets the age of an object, which depends on the sum of the number of all time rates having accrued to it times their lengths. However, if time is a force that causes aging, it may be that it does that by changing an object's chemical nature. If that is so, it may not be a property of matter, per se, but a supervenient to an underlying quantum structure instead. For example, aging may be a supervenient to the force of time, but if time is not a force and aging is fundamentally caused by, say, natural decomposition or quantum decay, time could then be a property of time. Otherwise, "A rose by any other name..."
I admit I don't know why speed is the preferred frame of reference for the application of time rates, but if by absolute motion you mean the speed of a sole object, why would time slow down for it and not increase instead? That statement is incomplete, it seems.