What interests me about time is the way we measure it. How did it become universal? Sure, we measure the days by the sun's rise and fall, but who decided ho to divide the day into 24 hours? Who decided that an hour had 60 minutes, that a minute had 60 seconds? Was there a time in history where that wasn't the case? Did some cultures divide the days differently? At what point did there become a global standard for measuring time?
Well... there is a beginning to time; it's called "The Big Bang".If there is no beginning, middle, or end to time, how can it really exist?
I can't seem to make up my mind on whether Gene Ray's ramblings are funny or just sad.[ramblings]
They say he has a pocket watch with that sentence engraved -I'd love to have such a thingTime is the fire in which we burn.
I'd think biological rhythms and structures play a role in there somewhere also.The Babylonians found a base 60 system easier to measure than a base 10 or base 100. The French did introduce metric time, but everyone decided that they were used to their base 60 system, so it was abandoned. In other words, it developed over time and became accepted because people liked it.
East coast America is 5 hours behind England. West coast is 8 hours behind. If you keep going west, you'll keep going back in time... and if you circle the earth you'll have lost one day.
So if you circle the earth in less than 24 hours, you'll have moved back in time. So if you keep circling the earth, you'll keep moving back in time.
But that can't be done because planes can't fly that fast.
^ my dad believes this.
what does it really mean?
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