Both can calculate the other's clock. The other's clock is different from theirs. When did the event occur?
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Answer: Time is reference frame dependent.
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Yet there's reliable consensus on the order of blocks on the chain, so what gives? ...
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Replying to @Outsideness @jpt401 and
... Clearly Nakamoto Consensus practically resolves the relativistic quandary. (No "spacetime" necessary.)
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Replying to @puellavulnerata @jpt401 and
Sure, but still: If it resolves the BGP coordination problem, it resolves spacetime relativity.
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Replying to @Outsideness @puellavulnerata and
... The two dilemmas are perfectly (formally) inter-translatable.
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Replying to @Outsideness @puellavulnerata and
... Without a restoration of absolute succession, the double-spending problem is invincible.
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Replying to @Outsideness @puellavulnerata and
... If "first" now has to mean: "First from the perspective of preponderant mining-power" ...
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... Then we've learnt something about (real but synthetic) transcendental temporality.
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Replying to @Outsideness @puellavulnerata and
... Inconsistent low mining-power local time-constructions are in error, saith the blockchain.
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Replying to @Outsideness @puellavulnerata and
Thus why Bitcoin is ruled by co-proximal Chinese ASIC hoard-lords.
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