Re: Time in physics
- From: "TomGee" <lvlus@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 23 Jun 2005 21:54:26 -0700
Sigh.... Here we go again. Looks like no one learned a damn thing
from all my posts since no one seems to have a clue what time is.
Orion, time is a property of visible matter and it passes at time rates
dependent upon an object's state of motion. Time rates are to time
what wavelength is to em radiation. Visible light is a small section
of the total em spectrum because that is the range our eyes can see
emr. The em spectrum is much wider than the range we can see, similar
to the range of time rates which are available within the universe.
Ranges of the em spectrum depend on wavelengths somewhat similar to the
way time rates depend on an object's state of motion. For an object,
time passes at rates inversely proportional to its state of motion. An
object can have time rates ranging from very slow to very fast like emr
can have wavelengths ranging from very long to very short.
Some claim that time is absolute but are unable to explain what that
means. I think that if the em spectrum is absolute, then the time
spectrum is absolute too because of their similarities..
Which is more fundamental? I think that time and matter are equally
fundamental in the sense that their visible existence is
interdependent, meaning we cannot have one without the other. At
least, not that we can see. But there is evidence that matter and
energy exist invisible to us, and if so, that means they are negative
matter and energy, as in Dark Matter, and they are invisible to us
because they cannot have temperature, which is the basis for us to see
anything.
Without temperature, there is no motion and thus, no passage of time.
Anything is possible in our imaginations, but somewhere lines must be
drawn. Where you draw yours identifies you to others where you stand.
.
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