@sonhouse saidNo.
@Metal-Brain
BTW, if time dilation causes gravity, will it do so in a universe with no mass?
Mass causes the time dilation, I don't know why though. That is a mystery.
@Metal-Brain
Because time dilation is a direct consequence of the mass, without mass, no TD.
It is an energy triangle, it doesn't matter from which direction you approach it.
@sonhouse said"Because time dilation is a direct consequence of the mass, without mass, no TD"
@Metal-Brain
Because time dilation is a direct consequence of the mass, without mass, no TD.
It is an energy triangle, it doesn't matter from which direction you approach it.
Correct, except for "kinetic" time dilation. I am not talking about that. We are talking about time dilation from mass, not velocity.
@shallow-blue saidHave you read "Why Socialism?" by Einstein?
Here's a hint: neither of you has read an Einstein book in your life.