Time is the comparison of one ratio of movement to another.
A particle has x number of rotations per a given length of time.
The rotations are each a circumferance and thus a length when unraveled.
A series of rotations is a series of circumferance thus a series of lengths.
Given x number of rotations within a unit of time, the measure of time is thus an actual length.
Time, as a series of lengths, is thus the recursion of space as a series of lines within a line as a line.
Time as Recursive Space
Re: Time as Recursive Space
No. Time allows motion. It is not a comparison.
What is the particle?
How?
No.
Time is not recursion of space. Time is a variable in Space-time. Space-time is intertwined.
Re: Time as Recursive Space
bahman wrote: ↑Sun Mar 22, 2020 12:34 amNo. Time allows motion. It is not a comparison.
Time is the measurement of motion, as rotations, given a specific intervals.
What is the particle?
Doesn't matter, can be cesium or a planetary body. A "particle" is "a part" of a greater whole...as such it can amount to anything, even dripping water or sand in a sand timer.
How?
One rotation results in a circumferance, a circumferance unraveled is a length.
No.
Yes.
Time is not recursion of space. Time is a variable in Space-time. Space-time is intertwined.
As a variable it is part of space as the recursion of space.
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Re: Time as Recursive Space
damn space
damn space again
re-cursed?
-Imp
damn space again
re-cursed?
-Imp