Posted by: o_V_o
Posting time: 4.6 years ago on 5/14/2016 2:46:46 PM
Last edit time: 4.6 years ago on 5/14/2016 2:56:34 PM
Archived on: 2/12/2017 1:51:00 AM
Views: 1001
SCP: 64
70 upvotes, 6 downvotes (92% upvoted it)
~123 user(s) here now
This subverse is a catch-all subverse. If you don't want to classify your submission or don't care about where it belongs, post it here. Anything goes.
NSFW: No Authorized: No Anon: No Private: No Type: Default
Content violates spam guidelines
Content contains or links to content that is illegal
Content contains personal information that relates to a Voat users real world or online identity
Content or User violates User Agreement
Hi, it looks like you're new. Welcome to Voat!
Voat is a censorship-free community platform where content is submitted, organized, moderated and voted on (ranked) by the users.
Archived Seeing as I'm still banned from /v/science for some reason - re: The illusion of time : past, present and future all exist together (whatever)
submitted 4.6 years ago by o_V_o
If you haven't seen it yet, this is the thread: The illusion of time: past, present and future all exist together Which references the Hafele–Keating experiment testing of the theory of relativity by flying atomic clocks around the world and comparing them to stationary atomic clocks on the ground...
My comment: This says nothing about time though, only the frequency at which cesium atoms vibrate in different scenarios. A clock running more slowly has no affect on TIME itself.
If your speedometer is off does that mean you're moving at at different speed? No. All the Hafele–Keating experiment proved was that time keeping devices (or more specifically, the vibration of cesium atoms) can be manipulated by movement... which says nothing about time itself.
Also: According to the mod of v/science (@system), I was banned for "spam", despite never even posting any comments there... as I mentioned 4 months ago.
view the rest of the comments →
[–] MorpheusGodofDreams 0 points 0 points 0 points (+0|-0) 4.6 years ago
That all depends on how you define time.
view the rest of the comments →
[–] MorpheusGodofDreams ago
That all depends on how you define time.