Static Time
Posted: Mon Oct 24, 2016 12:53 pm
I'm sure that someone has already developed this theory and I just don't know it.
I think about the nature of time a lot. When I do, the question of "Why are we here at this moment doing what we're doing?" And most of my life, I've applied the theory of- "The simplest answer is probably the correct one." In applying that to the nature of time, I had concluded that we're here doing what we're doing because we have to be. If the nature of time is such that there are multiple or alternate universes, one existing for every infinite possibility at every infinite point in time- then of course we're sitting here doing this, because we have to be-- this universe and these exact set of circumstances exits because they ALL exist.
But the other day on my drive home I was re-examining what I thought of this and then I thought, "What if the opposite is true. What if there isn't infinite universes, just one. What if we're here doing what we're doing because, in the whole scheme of things, this is the only way it could happen because this is the only timestream/universe, etc." So I thought about how that could exist- i.e, the opposite of the multiverse.
Then I thought that if time were static-- i.e., not a linear progression, but just one perceived to be a linear progression-- then we have just universe and existence.In essence, can our universe and our "progression" through it in time just be an upper-dimensional version of a crystal sphere. If a higher-intelligence views this sphere, they don't see a beginning or end. They don't see the movement or progression. They just see a thing called "Universe" and perceive it as the thing it started as and ended as (or looped as) all at once. To them, time is static.
I'm sure I'm not explaining this well, but I wanted to get my thoughts down on this before I forgot them and started obsessing over upper-dimensional black holes again.
I think about the nature of time a lot. When I do, the question of "Why are we here at this moment doing what we're doing?" And most of my life, I've applied the theory of- "The simplest answer is probably the correct one." In applying that to the nature of time, I had concluded that we're here doing what we're doing because we have to be. If the nature of time is such that there are multiple or alternate universes, one existing for every infinite possibility at every infinite point in time- then of course we're sitting here doing this, because we have to be-- this universe and these exact set of circumstances exits because they ALL exist.
But the other day on my drive home I was re-examining what I thought of this and then I thought, "What if the opposite is true. What if there isn't infinite universes, just one. What if we're here doing what we're doing because, in the whole scheme of things, this is the only way it could happen because this is the only timestream/universe, etc." So I thought about how that could exist- i.e, the opposite of the multiverse.
Then I thought that if time were static-- i.e., not a linear progression, but just one perceived to be a linear progression-- then we have just universe and existence.In essence, can our universe and our "progression" through it in time just be an upper-dimensional version of a crystal sphere. If a higher-intelligence views this sphere, they don't see a beginning or end. They don't see the movement or progression. They just see a thing called "Universe" and perceive it as the thing it started as and ended as (or looped as) all at once. To them, time is static.
I'm sure I'm not explaining this well, but I wanted to get my thoughts down on this before I forgot them and started obsessing over upper-dimensional black holes again.