On 15/11/2007, Mathieu Bouchard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Wed, 14 Nov 2007, Charles Henry wrote: > > > Zen master Dogen tells us that we say time is passing because we live in > > time. In fact, we are passing in time, and time stays exactly where it > > is. > > time seen as the 4th space dimension is also a result of > Einstein-Minkowski theory. It wasn't the only step in that direction, not > the first step, but it was a major shift. There's a version of Pythagoras' > theorem for that space-time, in which the only difference between space > and time is that they have a different sign. Thus time is a kind of space > with a scale factor equal to square root of -1. (You may also get to this > scale factor by fiddling with the wave equation.) > > Whether time "moves" or "stays exactly where it is" is a metaphysical > question: you can't make an experiment that distinguishes the two > possibilities. Thus it's just a matter of how we explain things to > ourselves. > > > Maybe we can find 2-D time through transcendance. hmmm an external for > that? > > I think that there is hope in reversing the roles of time and space in > equations, such that you have 1-D space and 3-D time. I don't think that > we'd be able to get to exactly 2-D time. Thus I believe that there is more > hope in [line~~~] than in [line~~]. > > _ _ __ ___ _____ ________ _____________ _____________________ ... > | Mathieu Bouchard - tél:+1.514.383.3801, Montréal QC Canada > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] mailing list > UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> > http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list > > As far as I am concerned, time is just one of the two main dimensions in music, the one that allows the other one(pitch/frequency) to exist, or at least to be realisable by my ears and brain.
If i may now borrow the theory and terminus Arrow of time by Arthur Eddington, according to which time is the fourth dimension in space, it has a direction and moves only to this direction, making everything in the past clear and stable, but leaving the future uncertain. (One could wonder: Exactly how straight is this axis? Could it bend and go back? Of course! In music this is called a "reprise".) So, is there ever going to be a [line~~]? Only "time" can tell. -- Ypatios. p.s.: Oh, glorious Wikipedia, you saved me once more! (I really should donate...)
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