I have been having some trouble thinking gravity through and am looking for some insight on it.
1. Does gravity act instantly regardless of distance?
In other words, does the sun's gravitational attraction of the Earth act instantly across space, or does it act at the information limit of the speed of light?
2. Is it theoretically possible for a sense organ to exist that "sees" gravity?
Our eyes evolved to provide us information about our surroundings by detecting the impact of light in the visible spectrum on objects.
Is there any reason that it would be impossible for evolution to produce a species with a sense organ that somehow detects the gravitational effect one object has on another, "seeing" gravity the same way we "see" light and "feel" heat?
3. If #1 is true and #2 is possible, would a species in possession of such a sense organ live in a non-relativistic universe, since they would be able to get information about the universe instantly, without being bound by the limit of the speed of light? When that species "looked" up into the sky, would it "see" the whole universe as it actually is in real time, rather than seeing the light-ghosts of the past as we do?
1. Does gravity act instantly regardless of distance?
In other words, does the sun's gravitational attraction of the Earth act instantly across space, or does it act at the information limit of the speed of light?
2. Is it theoretically possible for a sense organ to exist that "sees" gravity?
Our eyes evolved to provide us information about our surroundings by detecting the impact of light in the visible spectrum on objects.
Is there any reason that it would be impossible for evolution to produce a species with a sense organ that somehow detects the gravitational effect one object has on another, "seeing" gravity the same way we "see" light and "feel" heat?
3. If #1 is true and #2 is possible, would a species in possession of such a sense organ live in a non-relativistic universe, since they would be able to get information about the universe instantly, without being bound by the limit of the speed of light? When that species "looked" up into the sky, would it "see" the whole universe as it actually is in real time, rather than seeing the light-ghosts of the past as we do?