Strange, Isn't it? Even stranger is the fact that Einstein discovered it almost a century ago (in 1915) and it is still not taught neiter in high schools nor even in graduate physics courses in universities (that's why "physicists don't understand gravitation"). One has to take a postgraduate two semeter general relativity course to learn physics that is detectable to all living organisms as "gravitation". Since you are surprised by this "strange" behavior of nature, and I took such a GR course, I'm trying to explain this physics to you. If you don't catch something, ask.rstevenson wrote:Huh?!JimJast wrote:... Nature does not see any forces acting in the univese causing those movements. It sees only forces like those that press us against the Earth, but not any moving the Earth around or a stone thrown into the air. ...
You think there is a force pressing "us" to the earth, but that this force does not have any effect on a stone thrown into the air?
OMG!
First of all it is not quite true that the free falling stone does not feel gravitational force. If its greater than just a point if feels the weight of its parts, but it is so small that for the purpose of this explanation we may threat it as negligible (not worth talking about). So we may start the story from noticing that (small) stone does not feel any forces when it is free falling (except when it is moving and then it feels the air resistance but no "gravitational force"). So why it is moving at all?
The reason is so called "gravitational time dilation". It is an effect of time running slower near some mass, like eg. near the Earth. When time runs slower all the particles of any given object move slower inside it. Shake slower and rotate slower, and as a result the object contains less energy, it has smaller internal energy. Now, any object if left alone always moves to its position of smaller energy, with speed limited only by its inertia, until it hits some obstacle that has enough strength to stop the object from moving. Usually it is the surface of the Earth (that's why everything tries to fall on Earth). And if those objects are us, we are pressed against the surface of Earth with a force that is called "gravitational force".
A stone which is free, thrown into the air, keeps moving. It doesn't feel any force that we are feeling walking on the surface of Earth (until the stone too hits something and stops moving). So you may see that "gravitational force" is a force that show up only when an object is immobilized by some obstacle from following its natural path of free movement. And it is a force that pushes the object with its inertia against the obstacle.
That's why it is not an attractive force as people imagined before Einstein but an inertial force coming from "gravitational time dilation". A relativistic effect, part of "curvatures of spacetime" (there is also an effect of curvature of space involved adding half of the force to this effect but I hope this explanation is enough to see how Einstein's gravitation works). Do you think it is too complicated to explain it in school instead of pretending that there is a "fundamental gravitational force" acting at a distance through vacuum as it is done now in all schools now?