Is the assumption of a special system of reference
consistent with Special Relativity?
Year: 2005
In a previous work we have shown that the null result of the Michelson-Morley
experiment in vacuum is deeply connected with the notion of time. The same is true
for the the postulate of constancy of the two-way speed of light in vacuum in all
frames independently of the state of motion of the emitting body. The argumentation
formerly given is very general and has to be true not only within Special Relativity
and its ‘equivalence’ of all inertial frames, but as well as in Lorentz-Poincar´e scenario
of a preferred reference frame. This paper is the second of a trilogy intending to revisit
the foundations of Special Relativity, and addresses the question of the constancy
of the one-way speed of light and of the differences and similarities between both
scenarios. Although they manifestly differ in philosophy, it is debated why and how
the assumption of a “special system of reference experimentally inaccessible” is indeed
compatible with Einstein’s Special Relativity, as beautifully outlined and discussed
by John Bell [1]. This rather trivial statement is still astonishing nowadays to a
big majority of scientists. The purpose of this work is to bring such assertion into
perspective, widening the somewhat narrow view of Special Relativity often presented
in textbooks.