ChapelHillSooner
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First, I would say exactly not approximately. The "be treated" means we (or really nothing in the universe) is truly in a non-accelerating frame of reference (according to Newtonian physics) but we can treat is as one for any calculation.If by "be treated" you mean Newton would treat the moving car approximately as an inertial frame then yes, I think he would. He would definitely say that it is not an inertial frame, because it is not force free.
Can you expand more on your last sentence? I'm having a hard time understanding what you're saying here.
The quirk I am talking about is that gravitation mass = inertial mass. So that means all things accelerate in a gravitation field at the same rate. That means you can't really detect/feel that acceleration. That means any experiment I perform on earth would have the same results as if the earth was not experiencing any gravitational accelerations due to other bodies. (Treat this entire paragraph as if we are talking Newtonian only.)
My point is that Newton would not have any problem with any of that. He wouldn't say, "Well, we are actually accelerating which means we are not in a proper Galilean frame of reference so something is wrong." He would instead say, "It's a quirk of gravitational mass being equal to inertial mass which makes everything accelerate together. So therefore we can treat it as a proper frame of reference."
My point is that it makes sense for someone like Einstein to think, well, maybe we are looking at it wrong. Since we can treat a falling body as a Galilean reference frame, maybe it really is one. But people who present gravity as somehow breaking the concept of Galilean reference frames are wrong IMO.
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