From: BURT on 26 Jun 2010 16:51 There is time expansion but time's flow for matter is mostly below the speed of light. Mitch Raemsch
From: guskz on 26 Jun 2010 22:47 On Jun 26, 4:51 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote: > There is time expansion but time's flow for matter is mostly below the > speed of light. > > Mitch Raemsch Yes time expands all the time. Of course time is always below a certain velocity, that's why we also call it a velocity.
From: BURT on 26 Jun 2010 23:56 On Jun 26, 7:47 pm, "gu...(a)hotmail.com" <gu...(a)hotmail.com> wrote: > On Jun 26, 4:51 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote: > > > There is time expansion but time's flow for matter is mostly below the > > speed of light. > > > Mitch Raemsch > > Yes time expands all the time. > > Of course time is always below a certain velocity, that's why we also > call it a velocity. Velocity is dumb. It is "speed" of light. Mitch Raemsch
From: G. L. Bradford on 27 Jun 2010 05:45 "BURT" <macromitch(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message news:abe2c99f-27da-4160-b27b-b61f4e7e541b(a)y21g2000pro.googlegroups.com... > There is time expansion but time's flow for matter is mostly below the > speed of light. > > Mitch Raemsch ==================== If you bother to think about it you find that the universe's clock is simply light at the universal constant of the speed of light. The infinite Universe's always distantly closed up and collapsed universal horizon-constant having universal (thus everywhere 'local') use by the Universe. You want to see the broad aspect of that clock and time, you simply look into the observable universe. Of course you will also see that you are comparatively existing at a blazing speed, a truly awesomely blazing speed, as you can tell by the observed fantastically massive amount of time looking to be existing squeezed, crimped and crammed at the opposite end of the observable universe from us. We and all the local region of the [observed] universe, as opposed to that most distant non-local horizon of the universe [observed], are the traveling twin in the biggest picture version of a 'twin paradox' scenario. That most distant end of the observable universe, the observed ultimate in 'non-local' universe, is the stay at home twin as far as the [observed] [apparent] speed of time flow is concerned. Now I refer you back to the first paragraph for rereading and thinking. GLB ====================
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