the indefinite continued progress of existence and events in the past, present, and future regarded as a Whole .****We all have the Same 24 hours in a Day.
Monday, 28 September 2020
Tuesday, 22 September 2020
Wednesday, 16 September 2020
Four Seasons
Four Seasons
Northern Hemisphere
Winter..December 21st.
Spring.... March 21 St.
Summer.... June 21 St.
Autumn Fall..
..... September 21 St.
Four Seasons:
Monday, 14 September 2020
Place and time
Top Ten
On the BED..... asleep or Not... 8 hours daily.
Business Desk..... 4 hours daily.
Prayer Carpet........ 2.5 hours daily.
Outdoors Fitness.... 4 hours daily
Sunday, 6 September 2020
What Is Space-Time
What Is Space-Time
The fabric of space-time is a conceptual model combining the three dimensions of space with the fourth dimension of time. According to the best of current physical theories, space-time explains the unusual relativistic effects that arise from traveling near the speed of light as well as the motion of massive objects in the universe
Breaking_Up_Time_Negotiating_the_Borders_between_Present_Past_and_Future_274_p
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/263727621_Breaking_Up_Time_Negotiating_the_Borders_between_Present_Past_and_Future_274_p
This article sketches some of the recent evolutions in the study historical time. It proposes three issues that up to now have not received a lot of attention, but in our view deserve to be put on the research agenda. Three questions seem especially pertinent and urgent. First there is the question of how cultures in general and historians in particular distinguish ‘past’ from ‘present’ and ‘future’. We have a closer look at three historians as examples. Secondly, there is the question concerning the 'performative' character of temporal distinctions. Usually ‘the past’ is somehow supposed to ‘break off’ from ‘the present’ by itself, by its growing temporal ‘weight’ or distance – also in most philosophy of history. The article analyzes the distinguishing of the three temporal modes as a form of social action and proposes to regard the drawing of lines between the present and the past as a form of disciplinary ‘border patrol’ (Joan Scott). The third question concerns the political nature of the borders that separate these temporal