Capiert Posted September 26, 2023 Posted September 26, 2023 (edited) If anybody can travel backward in time, please tell me how cause they DIDN’T tell me either & I want to know. Time is a scalar (amount) in which the direction is determined ONLY by its amount. Thus, time is NOT bidirectional like a dimension is. Time ONLY goes forward. We can ONLY measure time going forward; NOT in reverse. Instead, time is a parameter (= something other than a dimension, thus) NOT a dimension. Disclaimer: Sometimes I have to say some of the simplest most obvious things (against ridiculous mainstream, NONSENSE opinions). Edited September 26, 2023 by Capiert
Bufofrog Posted September 26, 2023 Posted September 26, 2023 Time is not a vector but it is a dimension.
Capiert Posted September 27, 2023 Author Posted September 27, 2023 (edited) 20 hours ago, Bufofrog said: Time is not a vector but it is a dimension. I see NO evidence of that. Please explain. ..because.. You have heard (=read) my version. E.g. Dimensions (x,y,z) are all at 90° to each other. (That (3 mixture) starts at x; & ENDS at z, the last (alphabetic) symbol (but chosen) on purpose, intentionally (to prevent further ones).) Time is NOT at 90° to ANYTHING! Time does NOT belong to the category "dimension". It (=Time) follows NO previous example, thus it is unique, a category of its own (nature). I see NOTHING else to prove & convince me otherwise. It (= That (time) nature (=behaviour)) is very obvious (to (at least) me). Disclaimer: I DON'T care how badly Minikowski distorted the description of time in the past; it (=his distortion) is NOT fitting. Time reversal is NOT possible. Edited September 27, 2023 by Capiert
Bufofrog Posted September 27, 2023 Posted September 27, 2023 15 minutes ago, Capiert said: I see NO evidence of that. It is not possible to locate an event without the dimension of time. For instance if I want to have a meeting with you it is not possible without specifying a time, in other words it takes a minimum of 3 spatial dimension and 1 time dimension.
Capiert Posted September 27, 2023 Author Posted September 27, 2023 5 minutes ago, Bufofrog said: It is not possible to locate an event without the dimension of time. For instance if I want to have a meeting with you it is not possible without specifying a time, in other words it takes a minimum of 3 spatial dimension and 1 time dimension. What (is that suppose to mean)? I did NOT say we can do without time. Time is something else (an extra) which is necessary, but it does NOT belong to (category) dimension. E.g. I am alive, I live & breath (air) eat (food) & drink (water). All those extras, but they are NOT me.
Phi for All Posted September 27, 2023 Posted September 27, 2023 2 minutes ago, Capiert said: Time is something else (an extra) which is necessary, but it does NOT belong to (category) dimension. You can't move through space without moving through time as well. Changing motion through space or time affects the other in predictable ways. Special Relativity works, and it wouldn't if time weren't a dimension.
Capiert Posted September 27, 2023 Author Posted September 27, 2023 7 minutes ago, Phi for All said: You can't move through space without moving through time as well. But you can move thru time without moving thru space e.g. maintaining the same distances (so to speak). 7 minutes ago, Phi for All said: Changing motion through space or time affects the other in predictable ways. Special Relativity works, and it wouldn't if time weren't a dimension. Special Relativity was retracted by Einstein as defect, but (it was) a means to an End=his General_Relativity. Ch 22, 1920. Meaning Special Relativity does NOT (always) work. So I guess you lost that 1 arguement. Meaning time can NOT be a dimension. Sorry (for you).
Bufofrog Posted September 27, 2023 Posted September 27, 2023 22 minutes ago, Capiert said: What (is that suppose to mean)? I did NOT say we can do without time. It means time is a dimension. 23 minutes ago, Capiert said: Time is something else (an extra) which is necessary, but it does NOT belong to (category) dimension. You apparently decided for some reason to only recognize spatial dimensions as 'real' dimensions, that's fine for you, but don't expect others to jump on board with you. 3 minutes ago, Capiert said: Special Relativity was retracted by Einstein That is not correct. Special relativity is a special case (flat space time) of general relativity. 1
Capiert Posted September 27, 2023 Author Posted September 27, 2023 2 minutes ago, Bufofrog said: You apparently decided for some reason to only recognize spatial dimensions as 'real' dimensions, That's right! I'm only interested in the real McCoy. (E.g. Spare me the science fiction. I DON'T need Sc_Fi (like they do).) 2 minutes ago, Bufofrog said: that's fine for you, Thank you. 2 minutes ago, Bufofrog said: but don't expect others to jump on board with you. Pity (for them).
Phi for All Posted September 27, 2023 Posted September 27, 2023 51 minutes ago, Capiert said: But you can move thru time without moving thru space e.g. maintaining the same distances (so to speak). This actually supports the concept of time as a dimension. When you decrease your motion through space, you increase your motion through time, and it works the other way too. And even with length contraction and time dilation, two observers can agree on what's happening within their different frames of reference. And it only works this way if time is a dimension you can't separate from space.
joigus Posted September 27, 2023 Posted September 27, 2023 (edited) Time is a scalar under spatial rotations. Time is not a scalar under changes of reference frame that involve a speed. Also, things that change sign under certain transformations (spatial inversions) are scalars for everything else (every other transformation of coordinates). Those are called pseudoscalars. An example is the projection of an angular velocity on a fixed vector of space. Another example is the wave funtion of a meson. Etc. Which one do you mean? Also, a vector and a dimension are different things, as you've been told. Etc. Edited September 27, 2023 by joigus added link
Phi for All Posted September 27, 2023 Posted September 27, 2023 1 hour ago, Capiert said: Meaning Special Relativity does NOT (always) work. So I guess you lost that 1 arguement. Meaning time can NOT be a dimension. SR wasn't meant to ALWAYS work, it's a special case, as Bufofrog pointed out. Is this a situation where you misunderstood something and dismissed it out of hand? Your reasoning seems pretty shaky in this thread.
studiot Posted September 27, 2023 Posted September 27, 2023 (edited) On 9/26/2023 at 4:27 PM, Capiert said: If anybody can travel backward in time, please tell me how cause they DIDN’T tell me either & I want to know. Time is a scalar (amount) in which the direction is determined ONLY by its amount. Thus, time is NOT bidirectional like a dimension is. Time ONLY goes forward. We can ONLY measure time going forward; NOT in reverse. Instead, time is a parameter (= something other than a dimension, thus) NOT a dimension. Disclaimer: Sometimes I have to say some of the simplest most obvious things (against ridiculous mainstream, NONSENSE opinions). Quote Time is a scalar (parameter), NOT a vector (dimension)! I am going to say +1 for this correct stetement. Time is indeed not a vector, but then I don't know who said it was. I further can't figure out what you speculation is or why this is in speculations at all. The whole classification scheme of scalars, vectors, tensors, dyads, triads and so on is a bit fuzzy so it is important to know whether you are talking mathematics or physics as they are different. Also a quantity can be a scalar in one situation andn a vector in another, which make matters even more complicated. Equally there are situations where time may be considered a parameter, a scalar, a dimension or something else entirely. So it is not a case of one or the other. Edited September 27, 2023 by studiot
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now