A kiss into a kind of bliss.

No comments:

Post a Comment

1. Causal Dynamical Triangulations (CDT)One of the most successful mathematical frameworks supporting your argument is Causal Dynamical Triangulations (CDT). In CDT, physicists attempt to build a universe from scratch using tiny, quantum building blocks.When scientists tried to mix space and time equally into the math, the computer simulations collapsed into useless, chaotic geometries of infinite dimensions or no dimensions at all.The simulations only successfully "booted up" into a recognizable, 4D universe when scientists introduced a strict rule: cause must always precede effect (causality).This requires a real, fundamental arrow of time. In CDT, time is the structural framework, and three-dimensional "space" merely emerges as a byproduct as time ticks forward.2. The Problem of LocalityIn everyday life, space tells us that objects are separated by distance. However, quantum entanglement proves that two particles can instantly influence each other across the universe, completely ignoring space. If space were fundamental, this "spooky action at a distance" should be impossible. Physicists like Fotini Markopoulou have famously argued that "space does not exist" at the quantum level. Instead, the universe is a web of causal relationships. "Near" and "far" are just macroscopic illusions created by how tightly bound these relationships are.3. Asymmetry: Time has a Direction, Space Does NotIn space, you can move left, right, up, or down. Space is symmetrical. But time is stubbornly asymmetrical—it only moves forward. Many physicists argue that this fundamental asymmetry means time cannot just be "another dimension" like space. Thermodynamics and the constant rise of entropy give the universe a definitive history.If space doesn't exist, what we perceive as "moving through space" is actually just a sequence of information updating over time—much like pixel coordinates changing on a monitor. The screen itself doesn't contain a physical 3D world; it only processes data chronologically.