The Voice of Allan Zade
A human being tends to think that light is “something” and there is “nothing” between light pulses, rather than to believe that light pulses and darkness between them are two conditions of the same z-continuum (ref. # 1).
Disturbance of the z-continuum caused by object-to-continuum relative motion moves in all directions. Light makes that propagation visible and comprehensible to humans because of human perception.
- Allan Zade
There is a good mechanical example that explains such an illusion that comes from a compact cassette.
The Compact Cassette, also commonly called a cassette tape, audio cassette, or simply tape or cassette, is an analog magnetic tape recording format for audio recording and playback. Invented by Lou Ottens and his team at the Dutch company Philips, the Compact Cassette was introduced in August 1963.
- Ref. # 2
In the case of a compact cassette (as well as in any case of magnetic recording), a tape moves relatively to a tape head that makes physical interaction with the magnetic recording on the tape. The tape head makes an electrical output according to the recorded signal as soon as magnetic recording appears on a tape.
Suppose now this. An observer listens to the audio output of a compact cassette that keeps recordings of some beep sounds separated by some pauses between them. In that case, the observer can fall under the illusion that the recording moves regarding the tape head only during the beep signal, and the tape itself has no relative motion regarding the tape head. Moreover, the observer cannot distinguish between a situation where the beep signal does not exist in the recording and a situation where the tape is stopped.
The observer falls under a similar illusion in the case of propagation of light pulses (Fig. 1). He observes only light pulses because of his perception. He does not recognize the motion of the underlying continuum.
However, in both examples (optical and acoustic) signals show the same law of propagation and interaction with a given observer according to statements 1-4. For the same reason, one pulse never goes faster than another one or changes its order in the row of other signals.
This light puls experiment (LPX) is one more fundamental experiment with light that can be efficiently conducted in any modern physical lab with the described result. Moreover, the experiments clearly show this.
1. A light pulse has ZERO speed of relative motion regarding another light pulse.
2. A light pulse is “embedded” in the propagation of the z-continuum disturbance.
3. The speed of Darkness (or the speed of pure disturbance of z-continuum) regarding the continuum itself is ever constant regardless of perception or comprehension of a human observer.
- Allan Zade
Those statements and the experiment itself completely disprove the core of the theory of Relativity. As you probably know, "the greatest theory" does not give any answer about the propagation of two or more light pulses (or beams) in a given direction. That inability comes from Einstein's illusion that each light beam goes at the speed of light relative to any other light beam. As a result, "the greatest theory" fails to explain the light pulse experiment (LPX).
More than that. Information on this page comes to your computer from this site via some communication channel. Some part of that channel uses optical cable (or cables). It is also possible that an optical cable comes to your home router and makes a direct connection with it using optical signals (pulses of light).
Modern communication devices use light pulses in a way similar to the one explained above. Therefore, your observation of this page means the utter destruction of relativity because that “theory” cannot explain the operation of modern optical equipment.