This video from smirky pop science guru Brian Cox explains time dilation with a "stationary" and "moving" light clock. https://www.youtube.com/shorts/b2Vd9HGB5XQ
However since the foundation of Special Relativity is that all motion is relative, it is impossible to say one frame is "moving" and therefore impossible to say that only one frame is "slowed down". Both would have to be "slowed down" relative to the other. In other words the slowing in this thought experiment is just from the perspective of a frame of reference, but not real.
So why then does academia and the media insist Einstein's theory explains true and LASTING clock slowing? Is it an intentional conspiracy? I'm not so sure. Although perhaps those at the very top know better and pursue real science without relativity, it wouldn't be the first time science went astray organically.
It may be divine judgement on an immoral relativist world. And to that end I say good and "thy will be done". But for those of us who seek real truth in science, Einstein's work must be overturned. Herein lies an advantage for the decentralized over the well funded & centralized.
Or maybe I'm wrong and just a kook. Perhaps my tiny theistic brain can't grasp the complexity of Einstein's theories and should leave the thinking to those genius physicists. But until those genius physicists start doing anything truly ground breaking with relativity instead of chasing after black holes, "dark matter" and "gravitational waves", I'll stand by my reasoning.
In science, postulations/imaginings/guesses only have a place in hypothesis generation. The purpose of hypotheses is only to be experimentally verified or refuted. A hypothesis only becomes science after experimentally verified, and a valid hypothesis can never invoke fictional imaginings as a cause (ex "zeus caused this").
Newton understood that what he was doing was so blatantly unscientific that he famously didn't even attempt to formulate a hypothesis for gravitation - and of course - nor any experiment to test or validate it.
He just made it up (sort of, the concept already existed - credited to the ancient greeks - he really just "invoked" it)
He wasn't even observing physical laws - he was observing lights in the sky and then using math and fantasy to make up laws. This is, of course, completely unacceptable in science and inherently unscientific. Experiment is the driving engine of science, not fiction/imagination/math.
It is science to do as you describe - it is called "natural law", merely the description (in any language, mathematics included - but traditionally ... english) of what is. However, again, natural law cannot include fantasy/fiction nor speculate on cause (as newton's "law" blatantly did).
No, as i said - he merely "invoked" ones that rich ancient greeks had concocted while sitting on their asses, musing on reality.
It is hardly better.
True. And it is a simple explanation why relativity is clearly wrong. Paradoxes that are irreconcilable with reality as well as unobserved are not a "badge of honor" (as they are often misrepresented as) for a framework designed to describe/explain it.
Keeping in mind that i generally agree that newtons "sin" was less egregious, he did exactly that - and every physicist worth their salt since has loathed him for introducing magic into physics. "Spooky action at a distance", something (mass) acting upon something (mass) through nothing is absolutely anathema to physics.
It is the war of rational positivism vs pure theory. One is science, the other isn't.
All that said, and largely agreeing with your position in many respects - it is worth mentioning that - just like "newton's folly" - relativity is useful in certain contexts and matches with what we observe.
For instance, when we try to accelerate a particle - even in the best vacuum we can muster, for instance, it does not take the energy that newton's equations predict - but the ones that relativity does. This is one example of many. It is kept and taught not so much because it is correct, but because it is useful in certain contexts.
Also, einstein is a patron saint of scientism and they paid a LOT of money to secure that title. They won't give it up easily.