Oh George Ellis covers that well; experienced time is not linear to physical time, even if experienced time is constructed from physical time. My own thoughts on it – I think we get to live in the lag-time – that marvelous gap in the length of time it takes for our systems go do what they do; and we can float in there, experiencing a kind of gravity-free timelessness as much as we like

Oh George Ellis covers that well; experienced time is not linear to physical time, even if experienced time is constructed from physical time.
My own thoughts on it – I think we get to live in the lag-time – that marvelous gap in the length of time it takes for our systems go do what they do; and we can float in there, experiencing a kind of gravity-free timelessness as much as we like
==
Oh I don’t think this invalidates experienced time at all; I don’t believe experienced timelessness nor experienced time is an illusion; it’s in its own realm, in a simultaneously bound/not-bound state
  • Like

Worth considering:
Perhaps the wave function collapse isn’t all there is to say about time measurement vs flow

===

 

[responsivevoice_button voice="US English Male"]

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


× six = 6

Leave a Reply