So is innovation still happening? Yes, I am on a project.

The clock has never inspired much calm in people, but neither do deadlines.

The Fellowship @TheFellowship · Jan 27 Nearly 28,000 non-Jews—many of them Christians—risked their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust. Their courage is a powerful reminder of what it looks like to stand up for what is right, even when it comes at great personal cost. Today, we can honor their legacy by standing with and supporting the Jewish community in their time of need. Through our prayers and our actions, we can make a difference for the Jewish people of today.

The Fellowship @TheFellowship · Jan 28 Born and raised in a Christian family in the United States, Lois Gunden became a French teacher. When she was 26, Lois followed her calling to serve in Europe. Sent to southern France by the Mennonite Central Committee, she soon did more than just teach children… she saved the lives of many Jewish youngsters. Lois established a children’s home in Canet Plage, on the Mediterranean Sea. The home became a shelter for Spanish refugee children, as well as for Jews. The Jewish children who found safety there had been smuggled out of a nearby internment camp. One Jewish child whose life was saved was 12-year-old Ginette Kalish. In 1942, Ginette’s father was sent to the Auschwitz extermination camp, while the young girl and her mother were able to hide from the Gestapo. They escaped at first, but the Nazis caught them on a train and sent them to the camp at Rivesaltes. That camp is where Lois Gunden found young Ginette. Lois convinced Ginette’s mother to let her sneak the girl out of the camp. The diary that Lois kept while she worked to save Jewish children showed how brave and clever she was. One morning, a policeman came to the home to arrest three of the children who were Jewish. Lois told him that the children were out for a walk and would not return until later. When the officer returned, Lois said that their clothing was being washed and would not be ready until later. Again, the officer left. Lois prayed for God’s protection over the children, and the policeman never came back. The three children’s lives had been spared. With southern France occupied by the Nazis, Lois was considered an enemy alien. But she did not let that stop her; Lois continued to run the home. In 1943, she was detained by the Nazis, but released the next year. After the war, Lois returned home to Indiana, where she married. For the rest of her life, she taught French at Goshen College and Temple University, while also serving in the Mennonite Church. In 2013, Lois Gunden was named Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem for her courage and kindness that saved the lives of so many innocent children. She was truly a friend of the Jewish people and a Hero of the Holocaust.

There she was in the bat cave of the imagination, playing with her hair to the drops of water, and the cave began to sing, of a theatre of bats, spinning in circles above her. Amore!

The arts will make sure that life is not boring, that politics is not everything, and that you matter in the universe being created all the time.

It will happen because its an enticing challenge that most physicists really want to look at. I would think, because nobody has actually done this. I looked at some of the reworkings and it hooked me. Searching the web 37 results Yeah, that makes total sense—it's exactly the kind of seductive intellectual hook that draws people in. The "problem of time" in quantum gravity has been staring physicists in the face for decades (since Wheeler-DeWitt in the '60s), but actually committing to a full rewrite of physics where time is derived rather than assumed? That's rare because it's brutally hard: you have to recover GR's spacetime, quantum field theory's dynamics, thermodynamics' arrow, cosmology's expansion, and everyday causality—all from something more primitive (configurations, relations, entanglement, information, etc.). Most folks nibble at edges (e.g., emergent time in specific contexts), but a complete, consistent timeless framework that matches observations remains elusive. That's why it's enticing—no one's nailed it yet, so the prize feels huge.From what I've seen in recent developments (through 2025–2026), the momentum is building, but it's still fragmented:Pure Shape Dynamics (PSD) extensions: Work building on Julian Barbour's ideas (e.g., a March 2025 arXiv paper by Farokhi, Koslowski, and Naranjo) reformulates GR in a fully relational, scale-invariant, reparametrization-invariant way—eliminating external time and absolute scale. It shows Janus-point-like evolution (a symmetry around a "minimal complexity" point, explaining the arrow without fundamental time) even in inhomogeneous cosmologies like Bianchi IX. This is one of the most concrete steps toward a timeless gravity theory, and it's actively evolving. Page–Wootters refinements: Sam Kuypers and Simone Rijavec's 2025 paper ("Measuring time in a timeless universe," published in Phys. Rev. D) dives deep into how clocks and measurements arise in a stationary, timeless quantum state via entanglement. They implement instantaneous measurements and discuss synchronization—directly tackling how "time" gets operationalized internally without an external parameter. It's a strong push on the quantum side. Holographic and emergent frameworks: A December 2025 Royal Society paper explores laws of nature in a timeless holographic universe, where time and familiar dynamics emerge from 3D entanglement relations (no-boundary proposals, symmetry breaking). It argues that if holography is fundamental, time is emergent at the right scale. Relational emergent time models: Amir Hossein Ghasemi's late-2025 work proposes time arising purely from correlations in a static universal state, unifying quantum systems and cosmological expansion without assuming time upfront. Broader buzz: Pieces in New Scientist (2025–2026) on probing time's illusoriness via clocks/black holes, University of Surrey's quantum arrows of time (opposing directions in open systems), and various info-theoretic takes (time from irreversible information imprinting) show the conversation heating up. Even popular outlets and YouTube docs are picking up on "time as illusion" narratives tied to quantum gravity. You're right—nobody has fully "done this" in the sense of a unified, experimentally testable theory that replaces standard physics wholesale. The closest are these piecemeal successes in toy models, symmetry-reduced cosmologies, or specific limits. But the challenge is addictive because solving it could resolve quantum gravity, the measurement problem, the arrow of time, and why the universe looks classical at our scale—all at once.