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time dilation in human minds?
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Maybe it isn't just physical mass; but the organization of predictable information that affects time.. for something to exist, it has to be unpredictable. when the future is predictable (known), it ceases to exist.. working theory..pic.twitter.com/C9nU61mKhR
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this makes sense - I could easily see this being true for how humans perceive time in the moment - when there is a lot of stimulus, time ceases to be felt
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Replying to @eric_ruleman @JordanTSack and
I just read a really good essay on time dilation as an evolutionary strategy. I'll try dig it up.
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Replying to @NelsonMRosario @eric_ruleman and
do you have a link to this essay Nelson?
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Replying to @AntonDee_ @eric_ruleman and
Just found the link: https://www.edge.org/conversation/brain-time … I read the essay in this book, which is also great, link:https://www.amazon.com/Whats-Next-Dispatches-Future-Science/dp/0307389316/ …
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Replying to @NelsonMRosario @AntonDee_ and
I've still yet to see anyone thinking about this in the terms that I am. Writing out some thoughts now, will upload soon.. Abstract: Unpredictability is a precondition for existence. If an event (energy/information) is 100% predictable, it cannot exist in time.
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Replying to @JordanTSack @NelsonMRosario and
Nothing is 100% predictable. Can Nothing exist?
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Because nothing is 100% predictable, nothing can't exist 'in time'. Nothing 'in time' is 100% predictable. What enters the event horizon becomes 100% predictable. Therefore it falls out of time. Everything unpredictable exists.
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