Time Is The Indefinite Continued: Sand Hourglass Present Past Future
Time Is The Indefinite Continued: Sand Hourglass Present Past Future
Time Is The Indefinite Continued: Sand Hourglass Present Past Future
11 minutes per year. Pope Gregory XIII introduced a correction in 1582; the Gregorian calendar was only slowly
adopted by dierent nations over a period of centuries,
but it is now the most commonly used calendar around
the world, by far.
During the French Revolution, a new clock and calendar
were invented in attempt to de-Christianize time and create a more rational system in order to replace the Gregorian Calendar. The French Republican Calendars days
consisted of ten hours of a hundred minutes of a hundred
seconds, which marked a deviation from the 12-based
duodecimal system used in many other devices by many
cultures. The system was later abolished in 1806.[27]
1.1
1.2
the ow of water. The Ancient Greeks and the people from Chaldea (southeastern Mesopotamia) regularly
maintained timekeeping records as an essential part of
their astronomical observations. Arab inventors and engineers in particular made improvements on the use of
water clocks up to the Middle Ages.[30] In the 11th century, Chinese inventors and engineers invented the rst
mechanical clocks driven by an escapement mechanism.
A chronometer is a portable timekeeper that meets certain precision standards. Initially, the term was used to
refer to the marine chronometer, a timepiece used to determine longitude by means of celestial navigation, a precision rstly achieved by John Harrison. More recently,
the term has also been applied to the chronometer watch,
a watch that meets precision standards set by the Swiss
agency COSC.
The most accurate timekeeping devices are atomic
clocks, which are accurate to seconds in many millions
of years,[36] and are used to calibrate other clocks and
timekeeping instruments. Atomic clocks use the frequency of electronic transitions in certain atoms to measure the second. One of the most common atoms used is
caesium, most modern atomic clocks probe caesium with
microwaves to determine the frequency of these electron
vibrations.[37] Since 1967, the International System of
Measurements bases its unit of time, the second, on the
properties of caesium atoms. SI denes the second as
9,192,631,770 cycles of the radiation that corresponds to
the transition between two electron spin energy levels of
the ground state of the 133 Cs atom.
Today, the Global Positioning System in coordination
with the Network Time Protocol can be used to synchronize timekeeping systems across the globe.
1.3
List of units
[47]
The CGS system has been superseded by the Systme in2. This new time-standard then had to be consistently
ternational. The SI base unit for time is the SI second.
and accurately measured.
The International System of Quantities, which incorpo3. The new time-standard then had to be freely shared
rates the SI, also denes larger units of time equal to xed
and distributed around the world.
integer multiples of one second (1 s), such as the minute,
hour and day. These are not part of the SI, but may be
used alongside the SI. Other units of time such as the The development of what is now known as UTC time
month and the year are not equal to xed multiples of 1 s, came about historically as an eort which rst began as
and instead exhibit signicant variations in duration.[48]
a collaboration between 41 nations, ocially agreed to
and signed at the International Meridian Conference, in
[48][49]
The ocial SI denition of the second is as follows:
Washington D.C. in 1984 [50]
The second is the duration of
9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation
corresponding to the transition between the
two hyperne levels of the ground state of the
caesium 133 atom.
At its 1997 meeting, the CIPM armed that this denition refers to a caesium atom in its ground state at a
temperature of 0 K.[48]
The current denition of the second, coupled with the
current denition of the metre, is based on the special
theory of relativity, which arms our spacetime to be a
Minkowski space. The denition of the second in mean
solar time, however, is unchanged.
2.2
Time conversions
5
rotation of the Earth.
The Global Positioning System also broadcasts a very
precise time signal worldwide, along with instructions for
converting GPS time to UTC. GPS-time is based on, and
regularly synchronized with or from, UTC-time.
Earth is split up into a number of time zones. Most time
zones are exactly one hour apart, and by convention compute their local time as an oset from UTC. In many
locations these osets vary twice yearly due to daylight
saving time transitions. While a few governments still
legally dene their national times as being based upon
GMT, most major governments have now redened their
national times as being based directly upon UTC.
2.4 Chronology
2.1.2
4 PHILOSOPHY
instant[54] as an objectone point on the time axes. Divine time. In theology, Kairos is qualitative, as opBeing an object, it has no value;
posed to quantitative.
time interval[55] as an objectpart of the time axes In Greek mythology, Chronos (Ancient Greek: )
limited by two instants. Being an object, it has no is identied as the Personication of Time. His name in
Greek means time and is alternatively spelled Chronus
value;
(Latin spelling) or Khronos. Chronos is usually portrayed
date[56] as a quantity characterizing an instant. as an old, wise man with a long, gray beard, such as FaAs a quantity, it has a value which may be ex- ther Time. Some English words whose etymological
pressed in a variety of ways, for example 2014-04- root is khronos/chronos include chronology, chronome26T09:42:36,75 in ISO standard format, or more ter, chronic, anachronism, synchronize, and chronicle.
colloquially such as today, 9:42 a.m.";
duration[57] as a quantity characterizing a time
interval.[58] As a quantity, it has a value, such as a
number of minutes, or may be described in terms of
the quantities (such as times and dates) of its beginning and end.
Religion
3.1
3.2
4 Philosophy
Main articles: Philosophy of space and time and
Temporal nitism
Two distinct viewpoints on time divide many prominent
philosophers. One view is that time is part of the fundamental structure of the universe, a dimension in which
events occur in sequence. Sir Isaac Newton subscribed
to this realist view, and hence it is sometimes referred
to as Newtonian time.[16] An opposing view is that time
does not refer to any kind of actually existing dimension
that events and objects move through, nor to any entity
that ows, but that it is instead an intellectual concept
(together with space and number) that enables humans
to sequence and compare events.[64] This second view,
in the tradition of Gottfried Leibniz[17] and Immanuel
Kant,[18][19] holds that space and time do not exist in and
of themselves, but ... are the product of the way we represent things, because we can know objects only as they
appear to us.
The Vedas, the earliest texts on Indian philosophy and
Hindu philosophy dating back to the late 2nd millennium BC, describe ancient Hindu cosmology, in which
the universe goes through repeated cycles of creation,
destruction and rebirth, with each cycle lasting 4,320
million years.[65] Ancient Greek philosophers, including
Parmenides and Heraclitus, wrote essays on the nature of
time.[66] Plato, in the Timaeus, identied time with the
period of motion of the heavenly bodies. Aristotle, in
Book IV of his Physica dened time as 'number of movement in respect of the before and after'.[67]
In Book 11 of his Confessions, St. Augustine of Hippo
ruminates on the nature of time, asking, What then is
time? If no one asks me, I know: if I wish to explain
it to one that asketh, I know not. He begins to dene
time by what it is not rather than what it is,[68] an ap-
4.1
Time as unreal
7
is a present awareness of having been, which allows the
past to exist in the present. The relationship to the future
is the state of anticipating a potential possibility, task, or
engagement. It is related to the human propensity for caring and being concerned, which causes being ahead of
oneself when thinking of a pending occurrence. Therefore, this concern for a potential occurrence also allows
the future to exist in the present. The present becomes
an experience, which is qualitative instead of quantitative. Heidegger seems to think this is the way that a linear
relationship with time, or temporal existence, is broken
or transcended.[72] We are not stuck in sequential time.
We are able to remember the past and project into the
futurewe have a kind of random access to our representation of temporal existence; we can, in our thoughts,
step out of (ecstasis) sequential time.[73]
Isaac Newton believed in absolute space and absolute time; Leibniz believed that time and space are
relational.[69] The dierences between Leibnizs and
Newtons interpretations came to a head in the famous
LeibnizClarke correspondence.
4.1 Time as unreal
Time is not an empirical concept. For neither coexistence nor succession would be perceived by us, if the In 5th century BC Greece, Antiphon the Sophist, in a
representation of time did not exist as a foundation a pri- fragment preserved from his chief work On Truth, held
ori. Without this presupposition we could not represent that: Time is not a reality (hypostasis), but a concept
to ourselves that things exist together at one and the same (noma) or a measure (metron). Parmenides went furtime, or at dierent times, that is, contemporaneously, or ther, maintaining that time, motion, and change were ilin succession.
lusions, leading to the paradoxes of his follower Zeno.[74]
Time as an illusion is also a common theme in Buddhist
thought.[75][76]
5 Physical denition
According to Martin Heidegger we do not exist inside Main article: Time in physics
time, we are time. Hence, the relationship to the past
PHYSICAL DEFINITION
Classical mechanics
5.6
Quantized time
5.4
9
Time appears to have a directionthe past lies behind,
xed and immutable, while the future lies ahead and is
not necessarily xed. Yet for the most part the laws of
physics do not specify an arrow of time, and allow any
process to proceed both forward and in reverse. This is
generally a consequence of time being modeled by a parameter in the system being analyzed, where there is no
proper time": the direction of the arrow of time is sometimes arbitrary. Examples of this include the Second law
of thermodynamics, which states that entropy must increase over time (see Entropy); the cosmological arrow of
time, which points away from the Big Bang, CPT symmetry, and the radiative arrow of time, caused by light only
traveling forwards in time (see light cone). In particle
physics, the violation of CP symmetry implies that there
should be a small counterbalancing time asymmetry to
preserve CPT symmetry as stated above. The standard
description of measurement in quantum mechanics is also
time asymmetric (see Measurement in quantum mechanics).
Time quantization is a hypothetical concept. In the modern established physical theories (the Standard Model of
Particles and Interactions and General Relativity) time is
In the gures, the vertical direction indicates time. The not quantized.
horizontal direction indicates distance (only one spatial Planck time (~ 5.4 1044 seconds) is the unit of time in
dimension is taken into account), and the thick dashed the system of natural units known as Planck units. Curcurve is the spacetime trajectory ("world line") of the ob- rent established physical theories are believed to fail at
server. The small dots indicate specic (past and future) this time scale, and many physicists expect that the Planck
events in spacetime.
time might be the smallest unit of time that could ever be
The slope of the world line (deviation from being verti- measured, even in principle. Tentative physical theories
cal) gives the relative velocity to the observer. Note how that describe this time scale exist; see for instance loop
in both pictures the view of spacetime changes when the quantum gravity.
observer accelerates.
In the Newtonian description these changes are such that
time is absolute:[83] the movements of the observer do 6 Time and the Big Bang theory
not inuence whether an event occurs in the 'now' (i.e.,
whether an event passes the horizontal line through the Stephen Hawking in particular has addressed a connection between time and the Big Bang. In A Brief History
observer).
of Time and elsewhere, Hawking says that even if time
However, in the relativistic description the observability
did not begin with the Big Bang and there were another
of events is absolute: the movements of the observer do
time frame before the Big Bang, no information from
not inuence whether an event passes the "light cone" of
events then would be accessible to us, and nothing that
the observer. Notice that with the change from a Newtohappened then would have any eect upon the present
nian to a relativistic description, the concept of absolute
time-frame.[84] Upon occasion, Hawking has stated that
time is no longer applicable: events move up-and-down in
time actually began with the Big Bang, and that questions
the gure depending on the acceleration of the observer.
about what happened before the Big Bang are meaningless.[85][86][87] This less-nuanced, but commonly repeated
formulation has received criticisms from philosophers
5.5 Arrow of time
such as Aristotelian philosopher Mortimer J. Adler.[88][89]
Main article: Arrow of time
10
8 TIME PERCEPTION
but generally agree that descriptions about what happened ow of time to an earthbound observer. In this view, all
before one Planck time (5 1044 seconds) after the Big points in time (including future times) persist in some
Bang are likely to remain pure speculation.
way. Time travel has been a plot device in ction since the
19th century. Traveling backwards in time has never been
veried, presents many theoretic problems, and may be
6.1 Speculative physics beyond the Big an impossibility.[97] Any technological device, whether
Bang
ctional or hypothetical, that is used to achieve time travel
is known as a time machine.
While the Big Bang model is well established in cosA central problem with time travel to the past is the vimology, it is likely to be rened in the future. Little is
olation of causality; should an eect precede its cause,
known about the earliest moments of the universes hisit would give rise to the possibility of a temporal paratory. The PenroseHawking singularity theorems require
dox. Some interpretations of time travel resolve this by
the existence of a singularity at the beginning of cosmic
accepting the possibility of travel between branch points,
time. However, these theorems assume that general relparallel realities, or universes.
ativity is correct, but general relativity must break down
before the universe reaches the Planck temperature, and Another solution to the problem of causality-based tema correct treatment of quantum gravity may avoid the poral paradoxes is that such paradoxes cannot arise simply because they have not arisen. As illustrated in numersingularity.[90]
ous works of ction, free will either ceases to exist in the
If ination has indeed occurred, it is likely that there are
past or the outcomes of such decisions are predetermined.
parts of the universe so distant that they cannot be obAs such, it would not be possible to enact the grandfather
served in principle, as exponential expansion would push
paradox because it is a historical fact that your grandlarge regions of space beyond our observable horizon.
father was not killed before his child (your parent) was
Some proposals, each of which entails untested hypothe- conceived. This view doesn't simply hold that history is
ses, are:
an unchangeable constant, but that any change made by a
hypothetical future time traveler would already have hap Models including the HartleHawking boundary pened in his or her past, resulting in the reality that the
condition in which the whole of space-time is nite; traveler moves from. More elaboration on this view can
the Big Bang does represent the limit of time, but be found in the Novikov self-consistency principle.
without the need for a singularity.[91]
Brane cosmology models[92] in which ination is
due to the movement of branes in string theory; 8 Time perception
the pre-big bang model; the ekpyrotic model, in
which the Big Bang is the result of a collision Main article: Time perception
between branes; and the cyclic model, a variant
of the ekpyrotic model in which collisions occur The specious present refers to the time duration wherein
periodically.[93][94][95]
ones perceptions are considered to be in the present. The
Chaotic ination, in which ination events start here experienced present is said to be specious in that, unand there in a random quantum-gravity foam, each like the objective present, it is an interval and not a duraleading to a bubble universe expanding from its own tionless instant. The term specious present was rst introduced by the psychologist E.R. Clay, and later developed
big bang.[96]
by William James.[98]
Proposals in the last two categories see the Big Bang as an
event in a much larger and older universe, or multiverse,
8.1
and not the literal beginning.
Biopsychology
11
neurotransmitters such as dopamine and norepinephrine
may be the reason for this.[102] Such chemicals will either excite or inhibit the ring of neurons in the brain,
with a greater ring rate allowing the brain to register the
occurrence of more events within a given interval (speed
up time) and a decreased ring rate reducing the brains
capacity to distinguish events occurring within a given interval (slow down time).[103]
Mental chronometry is the use of response time in Time management is the organization of tasks or events
perceptual-motor tasks to infer the content, duration, and by rst estimating how much time a task requires and
temporal sequencing of cognitive operations.
when it must be completed, and adjusting events that
would interfere with its completion so it is done in the
appropriate amount of time. Calendars and day planners
8.2 Development of awareness and under- are common examples of time management tools.
8.3
Alterations
Use of time
10 See also
Era
Horology
International System of Quantities
Kairos
List of UTC timing centers
UTC
12
11
Term (time)
10.1
Books
The American Heritage Science Dictionary @dictionary.com. 2002. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
1. A continuous, measurable quantity in which
events occur in a sequence proceeding from the past
through the present to the future. 2a. An interval
separating two points of this quantity; a duration.
2b. A system or reference frame in which such intervals are measured or such quantities are calculated.
10.2
Eric Weissteins World of Science. 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2011. A quantity used to specify
the order in which events occurred and measure the
amount by which one event preceded or followed
another. In special relativity, ct (where c is the
speed of light and t is time), plays the role of a fourth
dimension.
Organizations
Leading scholarly organizations for researchers on the history and technology of time and timekeeping
Antiquarian Horological SocietyAHS (United
Kingdom)
Chronometrophilia (Switzerland)
Deutsche Gesellschaft fr ChronometrieDGC
(Germany)
National Association of Watch and Clock CollectorsNAWCC (United States)
11
References
REFERENCES
[3] Time. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (Fourth ed.). Houghton Miin Company.
2011. A nonspatial continuum in which events occur in
apparently irreversible succession from the past through
the present to the future.
[4] Merriam-Webster Dictionary the measured or measurable
period during which an action, process, or condition exists
or continues : duration; a nonspatial continuum which is
measured in terms of events that succeed one another from
past through present to future
[5] Compact Oxford English Dictionary A limited stretch or
space of continued existence, as the interval between two
successive events or acts, or the period through which an
action, condition, or state continues. (1971)
[6]
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2010. Retrieved 9 April 2011. Time is what clocks measure.
We use time to place events in sequence one after
the other, and we use time to compare how long
events last... Among philosophers of physics, the
most popular short answer to the question What is
physical time?" is that it is not a substance or object but rather a special system of relations among
instantaneous events. This working denition is offered by Adolf Grnbaum who applies the contemporary mathematical theory of continuity to physical processes, and he says time is a linear continuum
of instants and is a distinguished one-dimensional
sub-space of four-dimensional spacetime.
13
Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on Random
House Dictionary. 2010. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
1. the system of those sequential relations that any
event has to any other, as past, present, or future;
indenite and continuous duration regarded as that
in which events succeed one another.... 3. (sometimes initial capital letter) a system or method of
measuring or reckoning the passage of time: mean
time; apparent time; Greenwich Time. 4. a limited period or interval, as between two successive
events: a long time.... 14. a particular or denite
point in time, as indicated by a clock: What time is
it? ... 18. an indenite, frequently prolonged period or duration in the future: Time will tell if what
we have done here today was right.
Ivey, Donald G.; Hume, J.N.P. (1974). Physics. 1.
Ronald Press. p. 65. Our operational denition of
time is that time is what clocks measure.
[7] Le Poidevin, Robin (Winter 2004). The Experience and
Perception of Time. In Edward N. Zalta. The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
[8] Newton did for time what the Greek geometers did for
space, idealized it into an exactly measurable dimension.
About Time: Einsteins Unnished Revolution, Paul Davies,
p. 31, Simon & Schuster, 1996, ISBN 978-0684818221
[9] Sean M Carroll (2009). From Eternity to Here: The Quest
for the Ultimate Theory of Time. Dutton. ISBN 978-0525-95133-9.
[10] Adam Frank, Cosmology and Culture at the Twilight of the
Big Bang, the time we imagined from the cosmos and the
time we imagined into the human experience turn out to
be woven so tightly together that we have lost the ability to
see each of them for what it is. p. xv, Free Press, 2011,
ISBN 978-1439169599
[11] St. Augustine, Confessions, Simon & Brown, 2012, ISBN
978-1613823262
[12] Ocial Baseball Rules, 2011 Edition (2011). Rules 8.03
and 8.04 (Free PDF download). Major League Baseball. Retrieved 7 July 2012. Rule 8.03 Such preparatory pitches shall not consume more than one minute
of time...Rule 8.04 When the bases are unoccupied, the
pitcher shall deliver the ball to the batter within 12 seconds...The 12-second timing starts when the pitcher is in
possession of the ball and the batter is in the box, alert to
the pitcher. The timing stops when the pitcher releases the
ball
[13] Guinness Book of Baseball World Records. Guinness
World Records, Ltd. Retrieved 7 July 2012. The record
for the fastest time for circling the bases is 13.3 seconds,
set by Evar Swanson at Columbus, Ohio in 1932...The
greatest reliably recorded speed at which a baseball has
been pitched is 100.9 mph by Lynn Nolan Ryan (California Angels) at Anaheim Stadium in California on 20
August 1974.
[14] Zeigler, Kenneth (2008). Getting organized at work : 24
lessons to set goals, establish priorities, and manage your
time. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 9780071591386. 108 pages
[15] Rynasiewicz, Robert : Johns Hopkins University (12 August 2004). Newtons Views on Space, Time, and Motion. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford
University. Retrieved 5 February 2012. Newton did
not regard space and time as genuine substances (as are,
paradigmatically, bodies and minds), but rather as real entities with their own manner of existence as necessitated
by Gods existence... To paraphrase: Absolute, true, and
mathematical time, from its own nature, passes equably
without relation to anything external, and thus without reference to any change or way of measuring of time (e.g.,
the hour, day, month, or year).
[16] Markosian, Ned. Time. In Edward N. Zalta. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2002 Edition).
Retrieved 23 September 2011. The opposing view, normally referred to either as Platonism with Respect to
Time or as Absolutism with Respect to Time, has been
defended by Plato, Newton, and others. On this view,
time is like an empty container into which events may be
placed; but it is a container that exists independently of
whether or not anything is placed in it.
[17] Burnham, Douglas : Staordshire University (2006).
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (16461716) Metaphysics
7. Space, Time, and Indiscernibles. The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 9 April 2011. First
of all, Leibniz nds the idea that space and time might
be substances or substance-like absurd (see, for example,
Correspondence with Clarke, Leibnizs Fourth Paper,
8). In short, an empty space would be a substance with
no properties; it will be a substance that even God cannot
modify or destroy.... That is, space and time are internal
or intrinsic features of the complete concepts of things,
not extrinsic.... Leibnizs view has two major implications. First, there is no absolute location in either space or
time; location is always the situation of an object or event
relative to other objects and events. Second, space and
time are not in themselves real (that is, not substances).
Space and time are, rather, ideal. Space and time are just
metaphysically illegitimate ways of perceiving certain virtual relations between substances. They are phenomena
or, strictly speaking, illusions (although they are illusions
that are well-founded upon the internal properties of substances).... It is sometimes convenient to think of space
and time as something out there, over and above the entities and their relations to each other, but this convenience
must not be confused with reality. Space is nothing but the
order of co-existent objects; time nothing but the order of
successive events. This is usually called a relational theory
of space and time.
[18] Mattey, G. J. : UC Davis (22 January 1997). Critique of
Pure Reason, Lecture notes: Philosophy 175 UC Davis.
Retrieved 9 April 2011. What is correct in the Leibnizian
view was its anti-metaphysical stance. Space and time do
not exist in and of themselves, but in some sense are the
product of the way we represent things. The[y] are ideal,
though not in the sense in which Leibniz thought they are
ideal (gments of the imagination). The ideality of space
is its mind-dependence: it is only a condition of sensibility.... Kant concluded absolute space is not an object of
outer sensation; it is rather a fundamental concept which
rst of all makes possible all such outer sensation....Much
14
11
REFERENCES
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understanding of the teleology of particular actions is ultimately related to the teleology of history in general, which
is the concern of eschatology.
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[63] Wolfson, Elliot R. (2006). Alef, Mem, Tau: Kabbalistic
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Extract of page 30
[84] Hawking, Stephen (1996). The Beginning of Time.
University of Cambridge. Retrieved 8 July 2012. Since
events before the Big Bang have no observational consequences, one may as well cut them out of the theory, and
say that time began at the Big Bang. Events before the Big
Bang, are simply not dened, because theres no way one
could measure what happened at them. This kind of beginning to the universe, and of time itself, is very dierent
to the beginnings that had been considered earlier.
[85] Hawking, Stephen (1996). The Beginning of Time.
University of Cambridge. Retrieved 8 July 2012. The
conclusion of this lecture is that the universe has not existed forever. Rather, the universe, and time itself, had a
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[86] Hawking, Stephen (27 February 2006). Professor
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of the earth, with degrees of latitude playing the role of
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As one moves north, the circles of constant latitude, representing the size of the universe, would expand. To ask
what happened before the beginning of the universe would
become a meaningless question because there is nothing
south of the South Pole.
[87] Ghandchi, Sam : Editor/Publisher (16 January 2004).
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with the Big Bang if he had distinguished time as it is measured by physicists from time that is not measurable by
physicists.... an error shared by many other great physicists in the twentieth century, the error of saying that what
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that what is not measurable by physicists is of no interest
to them, Hawking atly asserts that what is not measurable
by physicists does not existhas no reality whatsoever.
With respect to time, that amounts to the denial of psychological time which is not measurable by physicists,
and also to everlasting timetime before the Big Bang
which physics cannot measure. Hawking does not know
that both Aquinas and Kant had shown that we cannot rationally establish that time is either nite or innite. The
Great Ideas Today. Encyclopdia Britannica. 1992.
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[100] Cheng, Ruey-Kuang; Macdonald, Christopher J.; Meck, [114] Compiled by David Luckham & Roy Schulte. Event ProWarren H. (2006). Dierential eects of cocaine and
cessing GlossaryVersion 2.0. Complex Event Processketamine on time estimation: Implications for neurobioing.
logical models of interval timing (online abstract). Pharmacology, biochemistry and behavior. 85 (1): 114122. [115] Richard Nordquist. narrative. About.com.
doi:10.1016/j.pbb.2006.07.019. PMID 16920182. Re[116] David J. Piasecki. Inventory Accuracy Glossary. Accutrieved 9 April 2011.
racyBook.com (OPS Publishing).
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(January 1976). Marijuana and ethanol: Dierential [117] Utility Communications Architecture (UCA) glossary.
NettedAutomation.
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ChrisStylexCO, Anagogist, Iiii I I I, 2016matthew, Lyla1205, Gilderien, Demize.public, Wallfull, O.Koslowski, Widr, Lincoln Josh, Helpful Pixie Bot, MavericktheMan32, Whatsgoodinthehood, RayManzareksGlasses, Jolenejolenejolenejolene, K0 7zQY0oyqcz, Calabe1992,
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Zmzmak, Laique 77, Dustin V. S., Arnlodg, Badooga, DavidLeighEllis, The spammer god, C12, ThinkingYouth, Jwratner1, NottNott,
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32, Supernerd12356789, Jerrold43, Marathonman365, U5117629, Marsdenb, Geo4646, Deleted user 9, Deleted user 1, Motivao,
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