Knowing

epistemology, science, kinds of knowledge, methodology

Three arguments for 3D time

There are three main arguments for duration to have three dimensions: (1) The speed of light is a conversion factor between length space (distance) and duration (distime). Transportation conversion factors include the maximum, minimum, or typical speeds associated with different travel modes. Since length space is three dimensional, its conversion into duration space is also […]

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Variations on a clock

The U.S. National Debt Clock shows several ‘clocks’ that tick off dollars at a constant rate. The answer to “what time is it?” could be given in dollars. The Census Bureau has a population clock that estimates the present population for the U.S. or the world. The U.S. has a net gain in population of

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Conversion of space and time

If there exists a constant, characteristic speed, then one may speak of the characteristic conversion of space and time. For example, the speed of light in a vacuum is a defined constant in the SI system of units. So in physical science and its applications one may speak of the characteristic conversion of space into

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Time and memory

Is it possible to reverse time? Yes, in a sense. It is possible to reverse thermodynamic time by a local decrease in entropy. Cooling down, metabolism, and memory are examples of decreases in entropy. Memory may be described as an information model: it compresses experience for storage. The information in memory is not all that

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Time in the Bible

Time in the Bible is duration, not what is called thermodynamic time or the arrow of time. There is no inevitability about time in the Bible, unlike the increasing entropy of thermodynamic time. In the Bible time has a beginning and an ending. Time is an era, an age, a period of time. It is

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Temporal and spatial references

I have written several times about differences between ancient and modern ways of thinking, for example, this post on Biblical geocentrism. Another way to look at this is whether time or space are primary. What does this mean? We are most familiar with the primacy of space. Things exist within space as mere objects, and

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Perspectives on space and time

Space and time are complementary aspects of movement. Although space has been associated with stasis and time with change, they both entail movement. Space is the distance side of movement and time is the duration side. There are two ways of looking at movement: one is from the perspective on or within the moving object

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Homogeneity and isotropy

A circle or sphere are omnidirectional in two or three dimensions, respectively. This is equivalent to isotropy, uniformity in all directions. A straight line is unidirectional but multiple straight lines may require multiple dimensions. This is equivalent to rectilinear homogeneity. Pure space or average space is homogeneous and isotropic. Then space may be modeled by

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