Originally posted by: dejitaru
We're all travelling through time at the rate of one second per second - but that's not what I mean.
I may be ignorant, but I'm having a hard time swallowing that.
I'd like to point out that until we discard our instictive reasoning of everyday physics and utilize the same framework for analysis, no matter how much data/speculation/theory/flatulation gets thrown in, nobody's going to understand each other. It seems like there are a few posters who understand relativity, a few more (like me) who somewhat grasp the idea, and the others who've only just begun to touch upon the idea that time does not "flow" constantly.
From what I can remember, special relativity concluded that two observers in different frame of references always saw the same event occuring. The only difference was that their measurements of the distance and the time of occurance differed. What ended up happening was that everything can only travel at the speed of light. But, with spacetime, there are four axes, x, y, z, and t, resulting in the speed of light c being split up amongst the four axes via pythagorean, c² = x²+y²+z²+t². Either that, or I'm getting confused with another theory. At any rate, I'm sure the pythagorean part holds true, just not sure about the speed of light being the only speed.
That said, I wonder what you guys would think about the idea of "time" being not the fourth dimension, nor another axis of measure, nor even an independent variable, but as the result of causality. I mean, if you think about it, how is time measured? Crystal oscillations, swinging pendulums, the path of the sun across the sky, the path of the Earth around the sun, and so forth. All we've done is just relate one "measure" of time to the other.
Take, for example, the measure of one year. That's the time it takes for the Earth to orbit the sun once. Then, break that down into months, days, hours, minutes, seconds, nanoseconds, until you get to the number of oscillations for a weight on a string, quartz or cesium or whatever you're using. None of these really measures "time" as we traditionally picture it. The Earth's orbit is influenced, even if only minutely, by external forces. Swinging weights are influenced by gravitational fluctuations and air resistence. Crystals are influenced by heat and the actualy instruments used to measure them. In fact, according to Heisenburg's simple, yet annoying principle, you can never measure the exact position of your measuring device without messing up its oscillation, which would mess up its measure of time, which means in order to keep an exact measure of time, we would never be able to know what time it is.
The conclusion of this long spiel is time does not cause events to occur, these events cause time. It is only because these events occur that we can actually come up with a measure of time; that we can actually perceive the passage of time.