On Time
- rabie soubra
- Oct 1
- 1 min read
The earth rotates around the sun.
Each rotation we call a year, while in fact, it is only an actual distance covered.
So time, in this case, is a measure of distance.
If we reverse the rotation of the earth around the sun, time will not change because the distance is the same, we will still have day and night.
Time will not change and sequences will not be reversed.
When a glass falls down from a table and it shatters, there is a sequence of energy dispersal and propagation.
We perceive that sequence in a framework we call time, simply because it does not happen all at once.
That sequence of energy dispersal however, is independent of time.
It is related to gravity or other forces acting on the glass at that moment.
The higher the energy dispersal, the faster the object breaks.
So if you want to knock down a building with a hammer, it will take you one hundred years. While if you place a nuclear device under it, it will be knocked down in no time.






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