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Philosophy of Physics
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Politics
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Thread ID:
00834984
Message ID:
00840467
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>Fundamental nature might occur at speeds that make distance irrelevant, thus time becomes irrelevant.

I think what you're missing is that spacetime in fundamental nature is different than spacetime in our nature so, as you point out, any comparisons between the two are irrelevant.

How can time be different? If time is a change of state between two objects, and if the forces of electromagnetism and gravitation is what changes the state between objects to create time, are electromagnetism and gravitation undefined in time?

They are undefined in the time they create, but they must still exist in some time or another. It was this line of reasoning that allowed me to discover fundamental time and eventually the rest of fundamental nature as described by my hypothesis.
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