Abstract
This essay takes the idea of time as a relation of distance and velocity. Then it shows how an observer traveling at a relative velocity measure's the same velocity for objects that assume they are at rest, using geometry to find the affects of relativity. Then formulates a proof that v'=v so that the affects of time dialation and length contraction do not interfear with a body in motion so that Newtons Secound Law of Motion holds true without time being a force acting on a body in motion.
John Daniel Barrett