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elosin
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What is time??
elosin said:What is time??
N468989 said:Time is the rate at which things change. Some perceive it as fast others slow. It is said that if we were capable of traveling at the speed of light time would stop.
Phrak said:So you think time has a relative velocity. Care to clarify this-- you know, as the ratio of one thing compared to another. What are you comparing?
elosin said:Whao, all of this are new information. thanks they help alot=D
But one more question, if time is (space ,other dimensions that things travel to one direction.), What is before time? If time is what is mention, anything that happen before that should not even happen. Hence if that did not happen how does time even start?
The question is nonsensical. Time defines before and after, so it doesn't make sense to ask what is before time. That is like asking "what is north of lattitude".elosin said:What is before time?
DaleSpam said:The question is nonsensical. Time defines before and after, so it doesn't make sense to ask what is before time. That is like asking "what is north of lattitude".
N468989 said:The time as we perceive is relative to the observer. The biological time is constant, which is the rate at which we live. If we where to go outer space and travel at speed near the speed of light we would age less compared to people on earth, thus "travelling into the future". When we came back everyone would of aged much more.
Gravity also influences time, it is well known that due to the gravity force or field that satelites "time" is slower than Earth time. That is why the GPS (Global Positioning System) time has to be adjusted.
To our current understanding that is like asking "what is north of the north pole."N468989 said:I think that what he means is what happened before the big bang which is our time reference (13.7 billion years ago).
DaleSpam said:To our current understanding that is like asking "what is north of the north pole."
In what way is the south pole north of the north pole? The south pole is, by definition, not north of anything.nitsuj said:Easy, south pole.
DaleSpam said:In what way is the south pole north of the north pole?
DaleSpam said:The question is nonsensical. Time defines before and after, so it doesn't make sense to ask what is before time. That is like asking "what is north of lattitude".
Exactly. That is why the question is nonsensical.elosin said:How can you have a before and after if you do not even have a time line?
Nonsense. The location of the poles has nothing to do with the perspective of any observer. Similarly, at any location on the globe, which direction is north and which is south is unrelated to the perspective of any observer.nitsuj said:When the Earth is upside down. (the perspective of the observer standing on Earth facing the south pole)
DaleSpam said:Nonsense. The location of the poles has nothing to do with the perspective of any observer. Similarly, at any location on the globe, which direction is north and which is south is unrelated to the perspective of any observer.
nitsuj said:Cardinal directions have to be coordinated with something
nitsuj said:Saying you can't travel in a north direction when at the north pole is nonsensical.
Joncon said:No it isn't. At the North Pole you can only travel in one direction - South
There's an infinite number of directions, but every one of them is southwards.nitsuj said:I'd guess 360 different directions, one of them being north.Joncon said:At the North Pole you can only travel in one direction - South
DrGreg said:There's an infinite number of directions, but every one of them is southwards.
Southwards=towards the South Pole, by definition
Northwards=towards the North Pole, by definition
No, the poles are coordinated with the axis of rotation of the Earth with the north pole being the one where the star Polaris is overhead. North and south have nothing whatsoever to do with an observer.nitsuj said:Cardinal directions have to be coordinated with something, that's always implied and is intuitive. Because you didn't explicitly mention what the cardinal directions were coordinated with I specifically assumed it was with the observer. So a north direction from the north pole is heading towards the south pole.
Huh? I can't believe you actually wrote this. You can only travel south from the north pole.nitsuj said:Saying you can't travel in a north direction when at the north pole is nonsensical.
That is a distinction without a difference. If you are traveling south you are going towards the south, hence southwards.nitsuj said:Yup and nobody said southwards.
elosin said:What is time??
bobc2 said:I think the biggest problem with grappling with a concept of time is the tendency to try to think of time as some mixture of space and time. I think the biggest source of confusion has arisen from the use of the term, space-time--as though space and time are somehow mixed. The 4th dimension is not time, nor is it some kind of mixture of space and time.
So, one could first imagine the universe as a 4-dimensional space populated by 4-dimensional objects. The whole 4-dimensional universe is just there--all at once. Don't even bring time into the picture initially. This assures that you begin with a distinct separation of space and time into two separate concepts. This concept goes by the name of "Block Universe" and was suggested by Einstein's colleague, Kurt Godel (many physicists feel like Einstein embraced this concept--he just never liked to discuss it openly because of some of the bizarre implications).
Now, after envisioning a static 4-dimensional universe, then put in consciousness moving along the 4th dimension at the speed of light. So, in some sense--at least for us 4-D universe inhabitants/observers--the time comes in with consciousness.
Special relativity directly implies such a 4-dimensional block universe. Thus, the 4th dimension should not be thought of as a time dimension. It is a physical spatial dimension in the same sense as the other three spatial dimensions.