TIME- A Perspective
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Is Time Cyclic or Linear?
Time is non linear. It is Cyclic. Cyclic theory of Time in Hinduism.
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Questions on the nature of time.
Gravity affects time. How?
If time can be altered, it is always linear?
How could we percieve non-linear time?
The speed of light is constant in the presence of, and the absence of gravity. Why isn't time also exempt? I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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Gravitational force, or gravity, is the mutual attraction between all masses in the universe. Most scientists assume that gravity travels at the speed of light, which is actually the propagation speed of electromagnetic waves (such as light) in a vacuum. The speed of light is a physical constant equal to exactly 299,792.458 kilometers per second (km/s), or about 186,471 miles per second. The assumption that gravity also travels at this speed is implicit in Einstein's general theory of relativity, formulated in 1915, which recognizes the universal character of the propagation speed of light and the consequent dependence of space, time, and other mechanical measurements on the motion of the observer performing the measurements. Although this is still our best working theory of space-time, the concept that gravity travels at the speed of light is an assumption, and, until recently, has never been tested. The assumed speed of gravity remained untested and unchallenged for so long because most physicists thought that gravity shows its speed only in the propagation of gravitational waves through space, and since no one has even detected gravitational waves, measuring how fast they travel was not possible. Sir Isaac Newton thought that the speed of gravity was instantaneous, and Einstein assumed it traveled at the speed of light. Although scientists believe that Einstein was right, for nearly a century no one had been able to directly measure gravity's speed. However, on September 8, 2002, an international team of scientists did just that, using an experiment conceived by Sergei Kopeikin, professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Missouri-Columbia.1 [EDITED] Kopeikin and Fomalont became the first two people to quantitatively measure the speed of gravity, one of the fundamental constants of nature. They found that gravity does move at the same speed as light. Their actual figure was 1.06 times the speed of light, but there was an error of plus or minus 0.21. The results were then announced at the 2002 American Astronomical Society annual meeting in Seattle, Washington.5 The result rules out the possibility that gravity travels instantaneously, as Newton imagined. If it did, a minutely different shift in the position of the quasar would have been visible on the night of September 8. This vindicates Einstein's instinct when formulating his general theory of relativity, which was to assume that the speed of gravity was equal to the speed of light.6 [EDITED] http://www.csa.com/discov...erview.php
Gravity moves at the speed of light, but time doesn't. Why not? Time moving at the speed of light wouldn't change our perception of time. It would create either a finite or infinite unit of time. Finite, if it could be defined as we define a particle, or infinite if it could be discetely identified or perceived as other than a long string of continuity.
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So how big is the effect of gravity on time? Very tiny, at least as far as we are able to experience here on the Earth. For example, taking h = 100 metres gives f' / f = 1 - gh/c2 0.99999999999999. This means that Bob's clock is running 99.999999999999% as fast as Alice's, meaning we would have to wait a very long time for a noticeable difference in age to accumulate. Nevertheless, the effect has been measured using very accurate atomic clocks and the results are in excellent agreement with our formula. Indeed, the Global Positioning System (GPS), which relies on very accurate atomic clocks both on the Earth and carried by satellites high above the Earth, must account for this effect in order to work with the accuracy it does. It should be emphasized, however, that this warping of time, while small anywhere in our solar system, is huge in other more interesting places in our universe. A black hole is an extreme example, where gravity is so strong at the event horizon that time is slowed to a stop relative to anyone outside the horizon! But this is another story… I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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I feel like maybe time does not really exist, except as an observation of occurrances in relation to one another. But it is totally relative, not absolute.
Or, if it does exist, I think it is not actually being changed by things like gravity, but that other sensual things such as light & sound are being changed, and those things simply alter our perception of time. My Legacy
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TIME-Non-Linear Theory.In Indian Philosophy, Philosophy, Quantum Thgeory, Space, Time on August 21, 2009 at 03:56 TIME- A Perspective .
[EDITED] To understand things as they are is beyond human ability. Let us say that we want to know whether there are any particles that travel at a higher velocity than light. (It has been proved theoretically that they exist).If we want to prove them by direct experience rather than inference, we need to be in motion in tune with the particle traveling faster than the velocity of light (Einstein circumvented this problem by theorizing that if an object were to travel at a higher velocity than that of light, it would no longer remain matter. (Theory of Relativity.)
Time Zones differ.Let us leave the explanation or justification for the change in Time zones. The fact is, one in a particular Time zone can only visualize or imagine the reality of the other time zone, nothing more. From the individual stand point, the time zone in which he is placed is the Reality and the other time zones are not experienced by him directly at the given point of Time. We go with the statement of others that other time zones exist because people who live in the other zones vouch for it. But we do not perceive it by ourselves.
What of the moment just before Big Bang? Stephen Hawkins states that it is irrelevant as it has no bearing on our Time frame. (Brief History of Time)
Is it logical to say that when we can not comprehend or explain concept, the concept is irrelevant? What if it has a frame of reference of time than the one understood by us?
Time is understood by displacement. It means that we perceive Time because of a displacement of object, be it the universe or the hands of a clock. This Circular Reasoning is a logical fallacy. (As we say commonly. egg came from the Hen and Hen came from the egg. We can not arrive at a conclusion).
[EDITED]
We can see Time is Nonlinear and is Cyclic.
Time moves both forwards and backwards .Time is a Stream; so is Space. Per se they are Absolute. They are Relative to the observer. To put it in simpler words ,things exist in Space and Time at all times irrespective of your positioning and what we say to day has happened ,is right now happening at another level for an observer positioned to observe it. For them, our Universe is Past. Similarly for another observer, what we see as future, may be Present. ** If we accept the Linear Theory of Time, we can not account for the time factor. http://ramanan50.wordpres...ar-theory/
This actually makes more sense, that time isn't linear. It's only linear relative to my perception as the viewer. An attribute of reality. I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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It is definitely changed by gravity as a clock in space runs at a different speed than a clock on Earth. The clock with less gravity, is faster.
But these observations of occurrences don't occur simultaneously. These occurrences also exist even if there are no humans to record them. I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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I have heard that, and I know we're not talking about a normal alarm clock here, but I have to wonder are we totally sure it is time itself being affected and not just the clock? My Legacy
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Yes. The clocks are atomic. I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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I found this:
I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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but presumably atomic clocks (and atoms themselves) might possibly affected by the physical world as well? My Legacy
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By gravity? Yes. But the atoms are much smaller than clocks, so less subject to gravity. How is a distortion in the measurement of time, not a distortion of time? When you go to sleep, time doesn't stop for you. The fact that you have no perception of the period does not eliminate its existence. I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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i'm truly glad to see that you have the copacity to relay your thoughts in the manner that you do. and i believe that the passin of time is whut ndru had said, "...an observation of occurrances in relation to one another." but then too i feel it can be curved like space which would then mean that it exist, but as a part of space...
not a scientist, just my thinkin i am KING BAD!!!
you are NOT... STOP ME IF YOU HEARD THIS BEFORE... | |
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It curves likes space, due to gravity but can also exist without space and space can exist without time I think as I think without matter, time has no effect, if that makes sense. I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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bare with me while i take this trip
i remember when i was a kid it was said that "eternity is but a blink of the eye of GOD"
then some years ago anne rice wrote of the thirteen revalations of evolution where she stated that the reason that angles started trippin was because from the first signs of life they saw death which was un-familiar to them
stick wit me, i'm goin somewhere with this.
with them bein able to see before and after it would seem that time is a dementional value to some but has no value to others.
now, in the world we inhabit there is a coralation between time and space because, perhaps, gravity like you say. however in a vacuum the would be no time for there is no gravity in the vacuum, outside the vacuum though things will still develope show a passage of whut we call time
i don't get high, BUT that got me fucked up
i am KING BAD!!!
you are NOT... STOP ME IF YOU HEARD THIS BEFORE... | |
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I agree, and that is why I believe that just because we might perceive time in relative ways--ie. how sleeping makes time "go faster," or the atomic clock that moves faster on the space ship, or the delayed sound heard from far away that happened seconds ago to the person who was right next to it--that time (if it exists) still moves at a constant rate.
Even if we amplified the effect of the atomic clock experiment, and it turned out that a person on a spaceship aged much faster or slower than a person on earth, in my mind that does not change any absolute passage of time. It might affect the the molecules in that person's body, not the actual passage of time in an objective sense.
My understanding is that the concept of time travel is that it is still impossible to go back in time. You can see time move backward by travelling faster than light, but you won't be able to interact with the past.
I don't know, it's a pretty difficult concept, I don't claim that what I'm saying is actually true. [Edited 4/28/12 15:37pm] My Legacy
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String theory. Quantum physics. Good stuff.
"Time" as defined by human beings is complete nonsense. It's made up gobbledygook. Animals, rocks, oceans, planets, suns, solar systems - these things don't keep time, they just exist. But man feels the need to measure and define "stuff", and for whatever reason, our brains are able to accept these things as truths. | |
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But time only exists because man says it does. So really, none of this is true, or occurring. Fun, ain't it? | |
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Why would there be no time in the vacuum? An outside observer could mark the passage of time in or outside the vacuum. (Well technically not from inside the vacuum as then it would no longer be the same space devoid of matter.) The absence of matter to mark time, doesn't mean time doesn't exist. We just don't see any effects of time. I agree there is no way to determine the age of a vacuum that one does not know when it was created (such as in a lab.) In that sense there is no time there.
I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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we do because we are aware of time passing and wish we had more of it. Keeping time is just a check on our own mortality ultimately. How much time we have on this earth. a whore in sheep's clothing | |
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u can easily relate the passing of time with age
mailto:www.iDon'tThinkSo.com.Uranus | |
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I disagree. Animals keep time. They migrate according to season, so they are aware of the passage of time. I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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Instinct, based on climate change. Temperature, wind direction, barametric pressure and the like. All of which they also have no understanding. They don't know that it's March, or October, because those are man made definitions. Instinct.
Man created the concept of time. The very notion of what a clock would do in a vacuum is a thought that only a human being would have, because no other creatures (that we are aware of, but certainly not on this Earth) use clocks. | |
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Think about how man manipulates time. Leap year. Daylight savings time. A sparrow doesn't care about such things. A whale doesn't care if it gets an extra hour of daylight, or an extra day in February once every four years so it's calendar stays accurate. | |
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i believe when one, hypotheticly, is in the vacuum they do not experience time (grow older, change, experience the passing of time) as it would be a bending of whut we call time. so whut happens outside the vacuum is where the time will be gaged and to the one who was inside that vacuum it would be news to them that anything took place i am KING BAD!!!
you are NOT... STOP ME IF YOU HEARD THIS BEFORE... | |
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Exactly, the clock is just a representation of the spinning of the earth.
If t My Legacy
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you fell asleep mid typing! a whore in sheep's clothing | |
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The point is that they are marking time in some fashion. They don't have to know the word. They don't need to understand time beyond their basic instinct. That instinct is still driven by the passage of time.
So until we 'created' time, the Earth, nor the universe was aging?!!! So then the Earth and the Universe aren't billions of years old because we haven't been around long enough to count that passage of time?
SO what was time doing before we named it? Was the sun shining before we gave it a name? Or is it's history negated because there were no people to name it? I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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But it does change the passage of time. One year is not one Earth year, everywhere throughout the Universe. Jupiter's year is 11.862 Earth years. We define a year as the period of time to make one rotation around the Sun. That is not an absolute measure of time but varies according to where one is in relation to the sun and how fast one is moving around it.
I'm not convinced that time moves at a coinstant rate, everywhere in the Universe. Gravity's affect on the measurement of time is real, but there seems to be some debate about what is actually being measured. If it affects how it's measured is there any artificial distortion or is the measurement real? I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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Man does not manipulate 'time.' What is being manipulated is how we mark the passage of time. We do not know how cognizant animals are of what we define as time. We assign them no intelligence and thus assume they have no ability to define or care. When they do act in accordance with some internal timepiece, such as when to migrate, without knowing, we assume they can't have any awareness. Time is a factor in every living creature's environment. I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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If you were in a vacuum, with a watch, why would the watch stop? There's no reason you can't park the passage of time in a vacuum. What you could not do is determine the age of the vacuum itself. There would be no matter to exhibit changes over periods of time that would then be measurable. I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think. | |
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