People are complaining that time is going so fast, it is so and it will accelarete to the point of collapse into zero time. A zero timewave is approaching us, soon the universe will stop and we'll experiance something really cool.
Zero time, eh?
Does that mean I just can just sleep in indefinitely?
~Ryan :)
Quote
People are complaining that time is going so fast, it is so and it will accelarete to the point of collapse into zero time. A zero timewave is approaching us, soon the universe will stop and we'll experiance something really cool.
We'll experience something really cool?... Maybe the true identity of our spacetime universe... mwahahaha!!! Or maybe not...
Just a question... You use the word "soon" as it's used in astronomy or as it's used in our daily life?... Because there might be a difference of some million years :roll:
And one of the most unexpexted questions... Why will time accelerate? :? And if so, then shouldn't it reach a level of infinite time where a zeptosecond would last an eternity!?
Oh, by the way... good afternoon :-D
Quote from: Xanth on April 18, 2010, 19:19:45
Zero time, eh?
Does that mean I just can just sleep in indefinitely?
~Ryan :)
I guess so, or you coud live several lifetimes in zero time.
I also feel that time is speeding up months go by so fast
if we did reach zero time do you think we would stop ageing
:NoY:
Quote from: NoY on April 19, 2010, 09:46:25
I also feel that time is speeding up months go by so fast
if we did reach zero time do you think we would stop ageing
:NoY:
I believe it's all in our perception of time.
What I mean is that I've found that as I've become older, my perception of time has significantly changed.
Remember, time is a constant... perception isn't. You know the old saying, "A watched pot never boils".
I think of time, probably, in a slightly different manner than most people... I don't think I can describe it though.
I cut my day up into chunks and from there time flies by pretty fast... at least my work-day does. LOL
~Ryan :)
I don't know? :? This past winter seemed like it would never end.
Quote from: vipassana on April 19, 2010, 22:24:31
I don't know? :? This past winter seemed like it would never end.
See, perception!
Here in Toronto, winter went by pretty damn fast... mostly because we had very little snow. :)
Ha! :-D Here in Raleigh, it snowed 4 times this winter. May not sound like much, but they don't know what a damn snowplow is down here. It really is all about perception. And now the weather is finally sunny, warm and beautiful, at least that is my perception. :lol:
I think zero time would look really scary. I imagine it as everyone is frozen in time. You cant move, you cant breath, you can only think... forever. There is no need for anything, as there is no time, but trust me you wouldn't want to waste your time in infinity!
So Xanth, if your lucky enough to get caught in a dream I think you would live in a dream world, forever...
Quote from: Everlasting on April 18, 2010, 18:54:12
People are complaining that time is going so fast, it is so
Where did this info come from?
Quoteand it will accelarete to the point of collapse into zero time.
Why?
QuoteA zero timewave is approaching us, soon the universe will stop and we'll experiance something really cool.
Really? Why?
Quotesoon the universe will stop and we'll experiance something really cool.
Yes it will, finally this absurd virtual reality will collapse and spirits from all sectors will be free once and for all :-) and there's nothing the system can do about it anymore, time can't, won't be restarted.
Rotten shoots don't last in creation.
But until then it may still get a bit rocky though.
kind regards,
Paul
I find that time and rain have something to do with each other. It has been raining for weeks here and it seems to have slowed time to a crawl. Then on the other hand I seem to have "no time" to do my gardening.
Coincidence?
Quote from: Tiny on April 30, 2010, 03:41:31
Yes it will, finally this absurd virtual reality will collapse and spirits from all sectors will be free once and for all :-) and there's nothing the system can do about it anymore, time can't, won't be restarted.
Rotten shoots don't last in creation.
But until then it may still get a bit rocky though.
kind regards,
Paul
Will you be disappointed if it doesn't happen? Or are you 100% sure?
I don't know if I missed it, but how has no one brought up Terence McKenna yet?
Google that shiz.
Terence McKenna Timewave Zero.
He put the I Ching on a graph of time, starting when the I Ching was supposedly written and damned if the graph didn't end on winter solstice 2012.
The graph is very interesting.....
How he got it.....more interesting.....a week long mushroom binge is bound to do that to anyone.
lol
If time is speeding up does that mean the galaxy and/or earth's rotation is speeding up? Like some type of space-time relation? Any physics oriented people have an answer?
the earth is slowing down.
i don't know what the amount is, but some amount of time is added to the length of our day every year.
Quote from: personalreality on April 30, 2010, 16:44:25
the earth is slowing down.
i don't know what the amount is, but some amount of time is added to the length of our day every year.
Actually, it's the other way around... which is why we have: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leap_year
~Ryan :)
am i backwards? so a certain amount is subtracted each year?
I know that the length of the day changes by a minuscule amount each year.
I used to be good at astronomy.
Quote from: personalreality on May 01, 2010, 11:40:41
I know that the length of the day changes by a minuscule amount each year.
Quote from: http://pages.prodigy.com/suna/earth.htm
Scientists estimate that the Earth's rotation is slowing at the rate of 2.2 seconds every 100,000 years.
Quote from: http://members.cox.net/ardipithecus/evol/lies/lie005.html
The Earth is really slowing down at about 1.5 milliseconds a day per century—not 1.5 milliseconds a day per day as the young-earth creationist state.
Quote from: http://www.badastronomy.com/bad/misc/tides.html
We use atomic clocks to measure time now, and to do this scientists needed to set these clocks to a standard time. The time chosen was 1900. However, the Earth's rotation is decelerating at a rate of about 0.002 seconds per day per century. It's been about a century since the atomic clocks' standard time, so the Earth is slowing relative to an atomic clock by about 0.002 seconds per day, or about 0.7 seconds per year.
i knew it.
that's why the moon is drifting away. we're slowing so your gravity is become weaker and can't hold the moon as close.
it won't be until after our sun burns out, but eventually the moon will break free of the earth's gravity and float away.
Quote from: personalreality on May 01, 2010, 12:49:19
i knew it.
that's why the moon is drifting away. we're slowing so your gravity is become weaker and can't hold the moon as close.
it won't be until after our sun burns out, but eventually the moon will break free of the earth's gravity and float away.
I thought gravity was in relation to mass, not rotational velocity?
I thought it was both. That the rotation increases the warping of space depending on the mass of the object.
I don't know apparently. Like I said, I used to be good at astronomy.
I'd heard that the moon is moving away from the earth at the same speed that human fingernails grow. I don't think that has much to do with "none time" though. Long nails are good for scratching itchy spots, I do know that.
not when you're on drugs, then they're good for scratching away layers of skin
I think the moon's own gravitational pull effects Earth also, hence ocean tides. So we need to compensate for that before we decide the moon can just "spin away".
the moon will spin away. one of the later moon missions that actually happened put a little mirror on the moon and a laser is shot from earth to measure the distance. Every year it goes a little further.
This is the nature of the evolution of star systems. The solar system isn't static.
But if our moon is gone we're in a world of hurt. It's been hypothesized that we owe our human existence to the moon being there. It normalized our weather.
Interesting. LOL I realize the universe and the solar system isn't static, but the moon has been here for billions of years, and it will probably take billions more for it to finally spin off. You should know by now I think everything evolves, including star systems. I think they theorize the moon was created when another planet may have smashed into earth early in the solar system's evolution, when many more planets were circling the sun with less stable orbits.
Correct, Cap'n.
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/moon_mechanics_0303018.html
it will be a good thing. just as all things are.
yea, the sun will have long since died out by the time the moon breaks from earth's gravity
time space WHat a disgrace to those who sleep in waist.
Quote from: Enix on May 21, 2010, 05:23:55
time space WHat a disgrace to those who sleep in waist.
I sleep on my back and my sides, but never on my waist.
I only sleep on my waist in the morning, I'll just roll over and chill there until its time to get ready.