Einstein’s
Theory of Relativity is shown to be a physical
theory of limited experimental validity. Twelve
different experiments seem to disprove its two
postulates.
THE PREMISES
Insufficiencies and gaps in Einstein’s
premise to his 1905 paper, “On the Electrodynamics
of Moving Bodies,” (1) have been pointed
out by several authors. (2) A case in which
Maxwell’s electrodynamics give different
results, which can be experimentally tested
as such has recently been pointed out by Bartocci
and Mamone Capria.(3)
Moreover, background radiation anisotropy measurements
today allow one to detect by electromagnetic
means the Earth’s motion relative to the
background radiation,(4) which can be considered
at least quasistationary within the “blackbody”
constituted by the Ether, “certainly the
most extended and probably the most homogeneous
known body.”(5,6)
It is, however, exactly at the basic level of
the postulates that experimental evidence seems
to disprove Einstein’s Theory of Relativity.