John Michael Strubhart

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After all, if absolute space really exists, it should provide a benchmark for all motion, not just accelerated motion. If absolute space really exists, why doesn’t it provide a way of identifying where we are located in an absolute sense, one that need not use our position relative to other material objects as a reference point? And, if absolute space really exists, how come it can affect us (causing our arms to splay if we spin, for example) while we apparently have no way to affect it?
The Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality
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