words that denote very different concepts — Seppo
meditation has secretly revealed — Seppo
Nothing is the absence of delineating qualities. Infinity is the absence of limiting qualities. Even on a semantic level they are not 'very different concepts'.
I was in fact looking where you wrote this. Couldn't find it though.I had the same experience.
Time dilation during the early stages of the Big Bang makes the notion of an infinite past debatable. It would seem that an "infinite past" would be bounded nevertheless. — jgill
However, I am certain that time dilation (whatever it is) did not involve Absolute Time. — god must be atheist
There may or may not be other matter in the universe beyond our observational capacity — god must be atheist
the passage of time on the spaceship as recorded here on Earth is curvilinear. — jgill
However, I am certain that time dilation (whatever it is) — god must be atheist
Ah, yes, meditation has secretly revealed to you that words that denote very different concepts are actually the same, because magic. :lol:
Very good. Not a very serious response, but definitely an amusing one. — Seppo
It's just that moving clocks seem to move slower. If you accelerate them they actually move slower. — Raymond
The clock hypothesis is the assumption that the rate at which a clock is affected by time dilation does not depend on its acceleration but only on its instantaneous velocity
Contrarily to velocity time dilation, in which both observers measure the other as aging slower (a reciprocal effect), gravitational time dilation is not reciprocal. This means that with gravitational time dilation both observers agree that the clock nearer the center of the gravitational field is slower in rate, and they agree on the ratio of the difference
The clock hypothesis is the assumption that the rate at which a clock is affected by time dilation does not depend on its acceleration but only on its instantaneous velocity
It's just that moving clocks seem to move slower. If you accelerate them they actually move slower. On/in different points vertically above the Earth you have to accelerate in different amounts to stay where you are. This means that at these different points the clock runs at a different rate. On the surface the slowest. — Raymond
People are actually voting that an infinite past is more "far-fetched" than something coming from nothing?
Jesus... — Xtrix
Thanks. No amount of explanation will stick. Because I don't see the underlying law that creates this effect. — god must be atheist
All I am saying is that since there are different clocks present showing different times, the time-dilation may be a different clock from the what I called absolute time (or absolute clock).
I don't see why this would be impossible, and I don't think you can tell me either. At least not in terms that I understand. — god must be atheist
What do you mean by an absolute clock? The clock running outside the universe? Inside the universe there is no absolute clock. — Raymond
The underlying law is simple. The speed of light has to be the same for everyone (or in any case, finite). — Raymond
Maybe we should reword the phrase how we envision that there was time before the Big banggg and that our time is not absolute. And then rephrase the fact in a way that makes sense to astrophysicists, quantum mechanics and street sweepers alike, that space and matter in it (in our beliefs) have existed forever — god must be atheist
There are a few steps in deducing facts from this law in-between the underlying law and understanding time dilation — god must be atheist
Bear in mind, something having an infinite past is absurd too. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Why do you find that absurd, pray tell? What I (and most poll respondents) find counter intuitive is rather the idea of a possible begining and a possible end of time. The idea of an infinite past and future is perfectly fine. — Olivier5
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