What if time itself were to somehow speed up, or to slow down? Then, everything in our universe would speed up or slow down with it — hypericin
The first man to make an appointment invented timekeeping. — Barry Etheridge
But I wonder if they thought that each new day is a new day or as the same day restarting all over, same chores, (milk the cow, pitch the hay, plant, hoe...) with nothing new....time as the cycle/rhythm of life, and the monuments marking the return of something already started rather than the forward progression of time? Maybe it became progressive once trading with others became normalized. — Cavacava
Yes... and if one is foolishly brazen enough to issue grand pronouncements on the nature of time, he should at least mention relativity!Er ... no ... ever heard of relativity?
So the problem remains: there are at most minute measurable differences, in most cases, in the relative speeds of time. But there is no such thing as an absolute speed of time. And without a speed, how can time, as we understand it, operate at all? — hypericin
The reason life is colorful is because light has different wave lengths. — m-theory
Time does not have a speed.
Speed is a measure of distance traveled in an amount of time.
It does not make any sense to say time has a speed.
You introduce a problem, how can a thing which is static be converted into an abstraction which is dynamic?
Time, as you point out, cannot have a speed/rate.
Therefore, time cannot be a dynamic process. — hypericin
Perhaps the entirety of time exists all at once, no one moment is more privileged than the next. What we perceive as a dynamic 3-dimensional system is really a static 4-dimensional one. The extra dimension gives "room" to project a 4-d static reality as a dynamic 3-d abstraction, just as the different chemical properties of different wavelengths of light allow for their projection as colors. — hypericin
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