- #1
octelcogopod
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I originally posted this in the philosophy forum, but that thread was closed and I was told to come here, so.. Here I am :)
I was also told that they were having great difficult understanding my question, so please bear with me as i try to explain this as simply as I can.
Imagine the universe as a movie, where if you "play" the universe at 1x speed, everything moves at a certain pace, just like in a movie.
Now, if you would suddenly play the universe at 2x the speed, all thingsi n the universe would move at twice the pace.
Or at least, in my speculations.
What this basically means is that if we measure the speed of one object, and then the speed of another object, the relative speed between each object is constant.
That is, if one car moves at 80 mph, and another car next to it moves at 80mph, they will both travel the exact same distance, if the conditions are perfect and exactly the same. (Road, asphalt, wind speed etc, everything is exactly the same.)
So what this tells me, is that each object in space is moving at constant speeds, realtive to each other.
So that 80mph will always be 80mph, if this wasn't the case, we could up our pace of time and travel extreme distances in a very short amount of time.
I do realize that 80 mph means 80 miles per hour, but what if we increased the pace of time? That would mean they would travel the exact same distance, at the exact same time, but the pace would be increased.
So I ask you this, what does this tell us about the universe?
I originally wanted this to be a philosophical discussion, but I realize now there is potential for scientific discussion as well, so let's drop the philosophical part for now.
My original point was that there seems to be two properties of time;
1. Time itself that enables objects to move, and
2. A pace of time, that time itself has a pace that enables time to move at a constant speed.
Now the pace of time may slow down or increase during big bang, or when the expansion of the universe has reached its limit, or maybe even just reached a certain point, but for now let's leave it at constant.
My questions are then, am I wrong in this assumption?
If not, is there any way we can calculate this "pace of time?"
Also any other comments you may have about this are welcomed.
I was also told that they were having great difficult understanding my question, so please bear with me as i try to explain this as simply as I can.
Imagine the universe as a movie, where if you "play" the universe at 1x speed, everything moves at a certain pace, just like in a movie.
Now, if you would suddenly play the universe at 2x the speed, all thingsi n the universe would move at twice the pace.
Or at least, in my speculations.
What this basically means is that if we measure the speed of one object, and then the speed of another object, the relative speed between each object is constant.
That is, if one car moves at 80 mph, and another car next to it moves at 80mph, they will both travel the exact same distance, if the conditions are perfect and exactly the same. (Road, asphalt, wind speed etc, everything is exactly the same.)
So what this tells me, is that each object in space is moving at constant speeds, realtive to each other.
So that 80mph will always be 80mph, if this wasn't the case, we could up our pace of time and travel extreme distances in a very short amount of time.
I do realize that 80 mph means 80 miles per hour, but what if we increased the pace of time? That would mean they would travel the exact same distance, at the exact same time, but the pace would be increased.
So I ask you this, what does this tell us about the universe?
I originally wanted this to be a philosophical discussion, but I realize now there is potential for scientific discussion as well, so let's drop the philosophical part for now.
My original point was that there seems to be two properties of time;
1. Time itself that enables objects to move, and
2. A pace of time, that time itself has a pace that enables time to move at a constant speed.
Now the pace of time may slow down or increase during big bang, or when the expansion of the universe has reached its limit, or maybe even just reached a certain point, but for now let's leave it at constant.
My questions are then, am I wrong in this assumption?
If not, is there any way we can calculate this "pace of time?"
Also any other comments you may have about this are welcomed.