TIME is Not Actual

How do people hypothesize time?

Henya Drescher

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Humans have a complex bond with time. Our modern lives are structured mainly by linear time and its precise measurement, a continuum that goes from the past through the present to the future. But is it continual, a march from one second to the next? Many physicists and philosophers now believe that time is not structural; instead, they believe time emerges out of something more essential — something nontemporal, perhaps something quantized that comes in separate chunks and not continuous.

What specifically do we know about time?

Do we conceive time moving from top to bottom, right to left, or front to back?

Albert Einstein changed our grasp of time by incorporating it as a factor in his theory of relativity and claimed that: “The only reason for time is so that everything doesn’t happen at once.”

Our one system of maintaining track of every event in the universe and on Earth has been assessing them to the current day with the consistent movement of time — a one-way flow that constantly progresses, clear from our use of clocks and calendars. But this equation comes with its own wrinkle. The consistent…

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Henya Drescher

Psychological thrillers writer, wife, mother, weightlifter, gardener. Stolen Truth on Amazon.