What is time and how does it move forward?

What is time and how does it move forward?

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rsta.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/366/1871/1861
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time is simply a sequence of events and it moves forward because of entropy

That's a stupid explanation

Define a single event

planck spacetime

The world isn't digital, that's just a theoretical limit. Why are you treating it as fact

Time is gravity.

any occurrence that is localized at a single point in space and instant of time

>define single event
>it's an instant of time
Found the philosopher playing the semantics game

yeah, like it can stretch and stuff
in many directions

>moron doesn't understand simple definitions
i'm sorry, for you

>trying to lure me into a maze of circular definitions
No, I'm sorry for you

rsta.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/366/1871/1861

maybe an example would be easier for you?
the moment on observers sees two particles collide could be an event, or the moment he sees the two particles 10m apart, or etc etc

event trigger definition is point of observation

Define moment

you should be able to do that yourself, we live in the moment

You have fields that encompass everything. Time is the movement of particles and waves throught that field. So time is always moving forward at every point in the universe, but it isn't moving forward in time at the same rate.

kek

idkfa duh

Time is the difference in displacement of an objects path through space represented in the 4th dimension.
Time moves "forward" as it cannot move in any other direction. Time only changes along the 4th axis, as it is a vector with respect to the lower dimensions.

>Time moves "forward" as it cannot move in any other direction
This explains nothing

Time is the 6th dimensional substrate of perpendicular quantum subfields. The centrifugal force of the quantum spins forces time forward. This is an updated version of Professor Hawing's theory.

is that Commander Keen?!?!