I just had an enlightening concept about ‘Time’ when I was in the bathroom and that was March 19th. Weirdly enough though I get many great ideas from there. This however, is yet to be one of the most enlightening I’ve had.
I think time to be 3 dimensional at least, much like a regular 3d object is. So far, most of us are content about knowing that reality has three dimensions: The width and the height, as well as the length.
I’ve learned though that if we talk about physical existence, matter that occupies the 3-dimensional space also occupies time. That said, then time, if it exists, should also be something that ‘envelopes’ reality as a 3-dimensional thingy.
If we do talk about time, we do wonder if it really exists. I am often led to think that time may not exist at all but a label we use to describe a moment of reality.
Why do I ask if time exists? Because I think we base it from a perception of the idea of ‘flow of time’, where a given event happening is constrained to a given moment in time, and thus ends, and then is considered history.
But what if everything is just a sequence of events, of motion and reaction and time is nothing more than an adjective to portray in our mind the idea of ‘when’ the observation took place?
Past is merely an attribution to describe an event that occurred before so we can differentiate the event now and the event which is no longer taking place (for mathematicians we say true ‘in the now’ for current event and false ‘in the now’ for the previous event).
To make it short, we use time to measure the order of when events are taking place.
Time, for me, may even be compared to the labels in a graph, where the given material object which occupies space, exists in a given time. If time is real, then time must have properties to own dimensions.
These would be:
1) Moment in Time. I compare this to a single point in the material realm. It is the moment of instance, a single graduation from the linear set or sequence of time.
For example we say 7:00 AM when we see the short hand on the number 7 of the clock and the longer hand pointing at the number 12 of the clock as well as the second hand, but only exactly as it happens. 7:00AM is no longer true the moment the second hand moves beyond 12. But in the true sense, the graduation is infinitely ‘finer’ where a single moment of time is only true at one moment, not a nanosecond earlier, nor nanosecond later, or even finer than a nanosecond.
2) Duration / Elapsed Time. This is what I would compare to the material plane’s line as the counterpart of the flow of time, denoting a ‘direction’ of flow. It is the time ‘spent’ for a given action of observation.
3) Possibilities/ Probabilities / Choice. This is the dimension which gives time it’s ’3D form’. But there is an interesting insight to this:
If the law of motion states that any action gives an equivalent reaction. In a frictionless void, let’s say a ball floating in space moving across, hits another object like a square, the cube moves according to the direction it was hit with the speed or energy equivalent to the one exerted by the moving ball during impact. It follows a singular, predetermined reaction. That is a linear form of time. In a sense, it’s only 2D.
Probability would like to think it can enter here because the square could be hit on any of it’s 6 faces or 8 corners or any given point on its surface, and this would give multiple time possibilities. This should be a 3d component. However, it is not, because if a linear action is given, then there must also be a linear reaction. Probability disappears because the motion was predetermined so there should only be one outcome. Without a conscious choice of action, there can only be a singular expected outcome for every event, because they all follow a rule of action = reaction.
When an influencing object becomes conscious however, he can choose the direction and speed or amount of energy exerted on something. Therefore anything that happens beyond his decision becomes a qualified possibility and these ‘time directions’ become close to infinite possibilities. The flow of time therefore enters a 3D realm.
As I was pondering about these, I became excited. Never had I a time to perceive time as such before. I went on to research on the internet for any further discussion about concepts of the dimensions of time. There was one I found in particular:
Ouspensky had a theory of the dimensions of time. Rather he perceived reality to have 6 dimensions. But stating them would take me longer to discuss. But the fact is, I was amazed at some similarities of his theory with mine but of course there are differences as well. His wonder about it expresses confirmation of a man’s need to understand his existence in reality and reality’s existence itself.
I consider these moments precious, however, as I it always brings me joy to address issues as deep as this, and even rarer still with great clarity. But what makes this more interesting is how others perceive time as well. If there are among you who have a different perception about time I would love so much to hear it.