Do all species feel the passage of time in the same way?
I started to think about this when watching the beginning of Voyager.
From a human perspective Ocampas live only about 9 years.
But, how do they experience it?
Might it feel like our average, say 75 years? Might different species sense time differently?
Their 9 years might feel longer than our lifespan.
As I've not gone beyond season 2 of Voyager for a long time I don't remember the end result of Ocampa's non-corporeal spacey thingy, perhaps they could live longer in that form but the 9 year corporeal form was just an example in this case.
I started to think about this when watching the beginning of Voyager.
From a human perspective Ocampas live only about 9 years.
But, how do they experience it?
Might it feel like our average, say 75 years? Might different species sense time differently?
Their 9 years might feel longer than our lifespan.
As I've not gone beyond season 2 of Voyager for a long time I don't remember the end result of Ocampa's non-corporeal spacey thingy, perhaps they could live longer in that form but the 9 year corporeal form was just an example in this case.
). But they don't have the same requirements. If a human child required that kind of input and attended a modern school, he or she would be climbing the walls from frustration before the first day was out. So I don't think the comparison works well.
)

