why would it fall apart if nothing was there to disturb it??zerbaman wrote:Have another question too.
If someone were to actually freeze time, understanding that all matter is supported by moving particles, wouldn't the particles freeze? Causing everything in physical existence to fall apart?
Relativity
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Re: Relativity
- frank grimes jr.
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Re: Relativity
That's relative. Reference points are infinite. Having your reality degrade means nothing outside of your own reality.zerbaman wrote:Have another question too.
If someone were to actually freeze time, understanding that all matter is supported by moving particles, wouldn't the particles freeze? Causing everything in physical existence to fall apart?

Just because you are a character, does not mean you have character.
Re: Relativity
yea i dont get thisfrank grimes jr. wrote:That's relative. Reference points are infinite. Having your reality degrade means nothing outside of your own reality.zerbaman wrote:Have another question too.
If someone were to actually freeze time, understanding that all matter is supported by moving particles, wouldn't the particles freeze? Causing everything in physical existence to fall apart?
invoking some inertial state that matter would like, fall apart if time was 'stopped'...
energy has to remain somewhere
so if someone sucks all the energy out of the universe in a giant energy vacuum cleaner, and there's no energy left... then yea i suppose you could say 'matter' has fallen apart
but if there is no energy, no motion, no acceleration etc. then matter is not matter anymore and whatever was there wouldn't fall apart, it would just cease to be
Re: Relativity
I'm just asking if it would. I thought it would because they'd stop moving. Would they not be off balance? Like nothing to hold it in place?
Read that earth will eventually stop spinning on it's axis and fall out of orbit. I thought it was a bit iffy as they likened it to spinning a basket ball on your finger. Earth isn't a basketball, the sun's gravitational pull holds it in place. But as these are supported scientific theories, I like to ask others and discuss them before drawing any of my own conclusions.
When you say cease to be, do you mean just disappear? Like in Hawkin's original hypothesis on black holes?
Read that earth will eventually stop spinning on it's axis and fall out of orbit. I thought it was a bit iffy as they likened it to spinning a basket ball on your finger. Earth isn't a basketball, the sun's gravitational pull holds it in place. But as these are supported scientific theories, I like to ask others and discuss them before drawing any of my own conclusions.
When you say cease to be, do you mean just disappear? Like in Hawkin's original hypothesis on black holes?
Re: Relativity
as noam said, time is just an arbitrary unit of measurement to specify a particular location in three dimensional space at a specific instant. Freeze all movement and time could not be recorded.
on a different tack, cooling the entire universe to absolute zero might have interesting effects, but apparently even with nothing moving, electrons would still be vibrating.
energy refuses to be destroyed, or be made to sit still it would seem!
on a different tack, cooling the entire universe to absolute zero might have interesting effects, but apparently even with nothing moving, electrons would still be vibrating.
energy refuses to be destroyed, or be made to sit still it would seem!
- frank grimes jr.
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Re: Relativity
Exactly jugo, time is only part of a system of coordinates.

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- youthful_implants
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Re: Relativity
and you haven't the vocabulary to tackle basic english so how you're going to explain physics to anyone, including someone as smart as me, is a complete mystery.noam wrote:you haven't got the stones to tackle physicsyouthful_implants wrote:I definitely noticed time slowing down when I was reading this thread.
gtfo

lol I'm only yanking your chain mate carry on.
- lloydnoise
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Re: Relativity
didn't read the whole thread so someone's probably summed it up better but:zerbaman wrote:But why would time slow down? I don't understand that?
It's like saying with special calculators 1 + 1 = -1... Just for you...
I understand what you're saying, I'm just thinking that in this theory, time has been mistaken with light. I'm trying to get a grasp of how it hasn't been though, this has annoyed me for a while now
The faster you travel through space, the slower you travel through time. This is why light, the fastest thing we know of, does not really 'experience' time (it's very very young). It helps that light has no mass but if we were to travel close to light speed through space we would experience a slow down in time RELATIVE to an observer who is not travelling at light speed.
Re: Relativity
I don't understand why time should slow down if it still takes time to travel at that speed. if you had a stopwatch, while travelling that fast, I assume that you'd see time going at it's usual speed wouldn't you?
Re: Relativity
You would. But say you had someone in a stationary position also measuring the time it takes you to get from A to B travelling at close to light speed, the time they register would be longer than what you got.zerbaman wrote:I don't understand why time should slow down if it still takes time to travel at that speed. if you had a stopwatch, while travelling that fast, I assume that you'd see time going at it's usual speed wouldn't you?
- lloydnoise
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Re: Relativity
yep, all about the observer, you have to have something to be relative TO, otherwise it's just your perception and then there is nothing of interest to notewilson wrote:You would. But say you had someone in a stationary position also measuring the time it takes you to get from A to B travelling at close to light speed, the time they register would be longer than what you got.zerbaman wrote:I don't understand why time should slow down if it still takes time to travel at that speed. if you had a stopwatch, while travelling that fast, I assume that you'd see time going at it's usual speed wouldn't you?
Re: Relativity
there is also gravitational time dilation just to confuse you some more
if you could suspend yourself above the event horizon of a black hole (whose mass was 1000x the sun) time would travel about 10,000 times slower for you than it would for people on earth
if you could suspend yourself above the event horizon of a black hole (whose mass was 1000x the sun) time would travel about 10,000 times slower for you than it would for people on earth
Re: Relativity
I'm currently reading:

It's better than this thread. Time is complicated, yo.

It's better than this thread. Time is complicated, yo.
Meus equus tuo altior est
"Let me eat when I'm hungry, let me drink when I'm dry.
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"Let me eat when I'm hungry, let me drink when I'm dry.
Give me dollars when I'm hard up, religion when I die."
nowaysj wrote:I wholeheartedly believe that Michael Brown's mother and father killed him.
Re: Relativity
to be honest i think before anyone in this thread gets to anything like that, they should invest in a copy of this:magma wrote:I'm currently reading:
It's better than this thread. Time is complicated, yo.

http://www.mixcloud.com/ghst/lagtini-001-promo-mix/
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Re: Relativity
zerbaman wrote:If someone were to actually freeze time, understanding that all matter is supported by moving particles, wouldn't the particles freeze? Causing everything in physical existence to fall apart?
This is what I say - time is measured by changes..
so in order to move through time...you'd have to move fast enough to get between changes..
and that's the time syn...it's sideways - a crystal jag - frozen
and - it's soooo wide - it maybe infinitely wide.
Last edited by bright maroon on Thu Sep 29, 2011 1:48 pm, edited 3 times in total.
i bet y'all are late on catching the hermetic allegory in every episode - parsons..?
thats pretty urban. - Capture pt
i think everyone would benefit from unicorns - JTMMusicuk
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thats pretty urban. - Capture pt
i think everyone would benefit from unicorns - JTMMusicuk
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Re: Relativity
giggles...what's the time...
<iframe src="/forum/video.php?url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QRqBBMNe2w&feature=related" frameborder="0" style="overflow:hidden; height:auto; max-width:540px"></iframe>
<iframe src="/forum/video.php?url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QRqBBMNe2w&feature=related" frameborder="0" style="overflow:hidden; height:auto; max-width:540px"></iframe>
i bet y'all are late on catching the hermetic allegory in every episode - parsons..?
thats pretty urban. - Capture pt
i think everyone would benefit from unicorns - JTMMusicuk
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thats pretty urban. - Capture pt
i think everyone would benefit from unicorns - JTMMusicuk
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- frank grimes jr.
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Re: Relativity
On the subject of reading material, the OP should probably just pick up a copy of Relativity.
Horse's mouth and all that.

Horse's mouth and all that.

Just because you are a character, does not mean you have character.
Re: Relativity
I wish I had. My head hurts.ghst wrote:to be honest i think before anyone in this thread gets to anything like that, they should invest in a copy of this:magma wrote:I'm currently reading:
It's better than this thread. Time is complicated, yo.
Meus equus tuo altior est
"Let me eat when I'm hungry, let me drink when I'm dry.
Give me dollars when I'm hard up, religion when I die."
"Let me eat when I'm hungry, let me drink when I'm dry.
Give me dollars when I'm hard up, religion when I die."
nowaysj wrote:I wholeheartedly believe that Michael Brown's mother and father killed him.
- Turnipish_Thoughts
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Re: Relativity
Interesting thread. I'll drop my piece.
To me time is classified as the motion of existence. Everything has a specific 'rate' at which it happens and we as observers are intrinsically part of that. Energy oscillations moving at different rates cause the different forms of sensations we pick up through the organs attached to our central nervous system. "Time", to me, is an internal abstract tied to our minds construction of sensory input into a subjective perception. Time being the acumulative effect of the collective (or 'relative') rates at which all the different aspects of existence manifest and interact based on causality, as experienced within the axis of causality from an individual perspective. (Time/ordering of events is always slightly different to two different observers.)
I believe we use the term 'C' (light speed) as we see the rate of light's interaction with physical space as being the most 'instant' aspect of the observable universe, ergo, it as a constant (allthough it may not be). The way of looking at relativity is: If you were traveling along with a single beam of light at the speed of light, you would not see it as a wave, but an oscillating photon. Ergo relativity. Things exist in an observable state relative to the state of the observe, the state of the object of observation being relative to the state of the observer in relation to the thing being observed.
Light emits from a source and bounces off an object, hits your retina, a charge shoots down your optic nerve and triggers an area of your brain adding to your experience. This happens at a specific rate. So fast, we class it as a constant so it is something all sentient beings can relate to and there-for use as a benchmark.
Sound moves slower than light but follows a similar pattern, we have evolved within a system of causality that interacts at specific rates, therefor our sensory instruments have evolved to be tuned into these rates. the internal construct of our experience of existence is based at these specific localities of the rates at which all of these atributes of existence manifest. Be it sound/sight/touch/smell e.t.c.
Space-time comes into the equation by stating that space and time are intrinsically linked, moving faster through physical space would mean altering our experience of the rates of these forms of oscillation of different aspects of existence, this would change our experience of reality. Relativity. (think the doppler effect or Red/blue shift)
Objectively speaking, it takes an amount of time for the light source to hit an object, bounce back and hit you in the face. If we were all moving near the speed of light and all observing the same thing from different localities, moving at different rates and different vectors, we would experiences the order of what we were observing differently because the light essential to our construct of observation would reach us at different times, and would have interacted with different aspects/temporal moments of the observed object as it changes. (Relativity)
Space curvature, to me, can be explained when you look out at the night sky. The further (theoretically) you look 'back' into the sky, the further back in time you are looking because it has taken the light longer and longer to reach you as it has had to travel further and further, but the universe is expanding, so as you look further back in 'time', you are also (theoretically) looking at 'possitions' of space (relative to the axis of time you have observed 'back' into) that don't exist 'in the time they are' in the place you are observing them to be in. Relativistically speaking, If an observer were at the possition of space you were looking at, and at the possition in 'time' you were looking back into, they would experience themselves as being much closer to the center of the universe, and in a much earlier age of the universe. To a point that even though you are looking straight out forward, away from the center of the univers,e you are looking at a part of the universe that is relatively speaking 'behind' the earth, millions of miles in the opposite direction.
The curvature of space time.
This is all obviously my opinion and probably complete bollocks
Now time 'travel' is an odd one. I believe its possible, you have to remember that light is an atribute of the construct of experience and the universe is existing within the axis of causality within the totality of the universe as a whole. Just because we are constrained to observing a finite distance (and time) away from our locale, does that mean that we are too constrained theoretically to physically moving to further points in space and time than we can observe, faster than our current model states is possible? It's not hard for me to believe that theoretically things may be able to move from one place to another faster than the current constant of our modal of understanding the universe. If someone were to time travel, as a human, they wouldn't experience the traveling, but i believe it would be theoretically possible to move 'physically' beyond the constraints of 1 light year of distance for every light year of time. Of course that would mean moving faster than the speed of light, but the way I see it is that you would also inevitably have to move an immensly great distance to carry out that 'time travel'. Time travel to me isn't something you can sit in a pod in one place and do and you certainly can't travel backwards through time, it to me is a movement through physical space beyond the constraints of our current physics model, where you would reach a physcial destination far earlier than you would have having followed current conventions.
I think 'time travel' is miss understood in that respect. Of course, thats just regarding basic conventions. Taking into consideration extreme space-time curvature, worm holes and higher dimmensions, we have a much larger scope of possibility, which of course only strengthens my argument of a decent theoretical possibility of 'time travel', given that the deffinition of that term is of course relative.
To me time is classified as the motion of existence. Everything has a specific 'rate' at which it happens and we as observers are intrinsically part of that. Energy oscillations moving at different rates cause the different forms of sensations we pick up through the organs attached to our central nervous system. "Time", to me, is an internal abstract tied to our minds construction of sensory input into a subjective perception. Time being the acumulative effect of the collective (or 'relative') rates at which all the different aspects of existence manifest and interact based on causality, as experienced within the axis of causality from an individual perspective. (Time/ordering of events is always slightly different to two different observers.)
I believe we use the term 'C' (light speed) as we see the rate of light's interaction with physical space as being the most 'instant' aspect of the observable universe, ergo, it as a constant (allthough it may not be). The way of looking at relativity is: If you were traveling along with a single beam of light at the speed of light, you would not see it as a wave, but an oscillating photon. Ergo relativity. Things exist in an observable state relative to the state of the observe, the state of the object of observation being relative to the state of the observer in relation to the thing being observed.
Light emits from a source and bounces off an object, hits your retina, a charge shoots down your optic nerve and triggers an area of your brain adding to your experience. This happens at a specific rate. So fast, we class it as a constant so it is something all sentient beings can relate to and there-for use as a benchmark.
Sound moves slower than light but follows a similar pattern, we have evolved within a system of causality that interacts at specific rates, therefor our sensory instruments have evolved to be tuned into these rates. the internal construct of our experience of existence is based at these specific localities of the rates at which all of these atributes of existence manifest. Be it sound/sight/touch/smell e.t.c.
Space-time comes into the equation by stating that space and time are intrinsically linked, moving faster through physical space would mean altering our experience of the rates of these forms of oscillation of different aspects of existence, this would change our experience of reality. Relativity. (think the doppler effect or Red/blue shift)
Objectively speaking, it takes an amount of time for the light source to hit an object, bounce back and hit you in the face. If we were all moving near the speed of light and all observing the same thing from different localities, moving at different rates and different vectors, we would experiences the order of what we were observing differently because the light essential to our construct of observation would reach us at different times, and would have interacted with different aspects/temporal moments of the observed object as it changes. (Relativity)
Space curvature, to me, can be explained when you look out at the night sky. The further (theoretically) you look 'back' into the sky, the further back in time you are looking because it has taken the light longer and longer to reach you as it has had to travel further and further, but the universe is expanding, so as you look further back in 'time', you are also (theoretically) looking at 'possitions' of space (relative to the axis of time you have observed 'back' into) that don't exist 'in the time they are' in the place you are observing them to be in. Relativistically speaking, If an observer were at the possition of space you were looking at, and at the possition in 'time' you were looking back into, they would experience themselves as being much closer to the center of the universe, and in a much earlier age of the universe. To a point that even though you are looking straight out forward, away from the center of the univers,e you are looking at a part of the universe that is relatively speaking 'behind' the earth, millions of miles in the opposite direction.
The curvature of space time.

Now time 'travel' is an odd one. I believe its possible, you have to remember that light is an atribute of the construct of experience and the universe is existing within the axis of causality within the totality of the universe as a whole. Just because we are constrained to observing a finite distance (and time) away from our locale, does that mean that we are too constrained theoretically to physically moving to further points in space and time than we can observe, faster than our current model states is possible? It's not hard for me to believe that theoretically things may be able to move from one place to another faster than the current constant of our modal of understanding the universe. If someone were to time travel, as a human, they wouldn't experience the traveling, but i believe it would be theoretically possible to move 'physically' beyond the constraints of 1 light year of distance for every light year of time. Of course that would mean moving faster than the speed of light, but the way I see it is that you would also inevitably have to move an immensly great distance to carry out that 'time travel'. Time travel to me isn't something you can sit in a pod in one place and do and you certainly can't travel backwards through time, it to me is a movement through physical space beyond the constraints of our current physics model, where you would reach a physcial destination far earlier than you would have having followed current conventions.
I think 'time travel' is miss understood in that respect. Of course, thats just regarding basic conventions. Taking into consideration extreme space-time curvature, worm holes and higher dimmensions, we have a much larger scope of possibility, which of course only strengthens my argument of a decent theoretical possibility of 'time travel', given that the deffinition of that term is of course relative.

Last edited by Turnipish_Thoughts on Thu Sep 29, 2011 10:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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