Time doesn't exist, is it all imagined by us?
We tend to believe that destiny is not fixed and that all the time has passed into oblivion, but can that movement be just an illusion?
In physics, past, present and future are only one. However, we all feel time in a single direction. From expectation everything will happen, to experience and all become memories . This is called linear time . And some physicists believe that we feel that time takes place because the brain nerve structure makes us think that way.
We tend to believe that destiny is not fixed and that all the time has passed into oblivion, but can that movement be just an illusion? A renowned British physicist explained that in a particular dimension, time simply doesn't exist.
"If you try to put your hand on time, it will always pass by your fingers," said Julian Barbour, the British physicist and author of "The End of Time: Revolution. Next in Physics, " said in an interview with the Edge Foundation.
The theory of "now" points has existed for a long time but has not been widely accepted.(Image source: wired).
Barbour believes that people cannot hold the time because it does not exist. While this is not a new hypothesis, it has never been as popular as Einstein's theory of relativity or string theory.
The concept of the spacetime universe is not only attractive to many scientists, but such a model can also open up the answer to many paradoxes that modern physics faces while explaining about Space.
We tend to think and realize that time has a linear nature, a familiar process that flows from the past to the future. This is not only a personal perception of all humanity, but also the extent to which classical mechanisms analyze all mathematical functions in the universe. There is no such concept, ideas such as the principle of cause and effect and the fact that we cannot exist simultaneously at two events, will begin to be considered from a completely different level.
The idea of time discontinuity, given by Barbour, attempts to explain in the category of a cosmic theory created by many points that he calls "now" . But those "now" will not be understood as fleeting moments coming from the past and will die in the future. A "now" is just one of the millions of existing "now" in the universe's endless mosaic of a particular dimension that cannot be located, each of which is related to the others. subtly, but none of them stand out more than the neighbors. They all exist at the same time.
Barbour thinks that the concept of time may be similar to the integer concept (integer).
With such a mix of simplicity and complexity, Mr. Barbour's idea promises a great solution for anyone willing to accept the time gap before the Big Bang.
Mr. Barbour thinks that the concept of time may be similar to the integer concept (integer) . All numbers exist at the same time, and it is impossible to think that number 1 exists before the number 20.
Most of us are deeply convinced that at an unconscious level, a great clock is ticking every second in this huge space. However, at the beginning of the last century, Albert Einstein explained that real time is related to every object in the universe, and that time is a "subject" that is not separate from space. Even the world's time synchronization experts know that this world is handled by a randomly assigned ticking, because the clock is completely incapable of measuring time.
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