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<blockquote data-quote="SinisterThinking" data-source="post: 197597" data-attributes="member: 12714"><p>"only if time has symmetry</p><p>the real mystery is if space can also <em>go backwards"</em></p><p></p><p>Time is absolute. It's a linear function related to distance and velocity. Time changes proportionally with the changes of distance and / or velocity. It is also required to have something that perceives it's change. That is not symmetry. There is no way to prove the symmetrical nature of time. Why? Well, it's linear.</p><p></p><p>The only way to know if space can go backwards is to first assume that space is in a constant state of negentropy, meaning as space expands the order of that space becomes more accute. Therefore, it has to stop expanding, order has to dissipate, and relationships act on their own accord related to gravity. Then after all of that, you need an immense amount of faith to believe that "nothing is something".</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SinisterThinking, post: 197597, member: 12714"] "only if time has symmetry the real mystery is if space can also [I]go backwards"[/I] Time is absolute. It's a linear function related to distance and velocity. Time changes proportionally with the changes of distance and / or velocity. It is also required to have something that perceives it's change. That is not symmetry. There is no way to prove the symmetrical nature of time. Why? Well, it's linear. The only way to know if space can go backwards is to first assume that space is in a constant state of negentropy, meaning as space expands the order of that space becomes more accute. Therefore, it has to stop expanding, order has to dissipate, and relationships act on their own accord related to gravity. Then after all of that, you need an immense amount of faith to believe that "nothing is something". [/QUOTE]
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