Tardbow:
1) No, you can have FTL in a relativistic framework. You just have to give up causality, as I've been explaining.
2) Even if relativity is wrong IT IS MORE RIGHT THAN SIMPLE GALILEAN TRANSFORMS (we have OBSERVED Galilean transforms being wrong, while SR is right to as many decimal places as we can currently measure). You have been implicitly presuming that Galilean transforms are correct in order to "demonstrate" that FTL does not violate causality.
Now just admit that you didn't have any clue what the **** you were talking about, and that you should have listened and asked questions instead of responding angrily from ignorance as you did.
For your edification, start reading here and continue as far as you need:
1) No, you can have FTL in a relativistic framework. You just have to give up causality, as I've been explaining.
2) Even if relativity is wrong IT IS MORE RIGHT THAN SIMPLE GALILEAN TRANSFORMS (we have OBSERVED Galilean transforms being wrong, while SR is right to as many decimal places as we can currently measure). You have been implicitly presuming that Galilean transforms are correct in order to "demonstrate" that FTL does not violate causality.
Now just admit that you didn't have any clue what the **** you were talking about, and that you should have listened and asked questions instead of responding angrily from ignorance as you did.
For your edification, start reading here and continue as far as you need:
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