THE THEORY OF NOW
Disclaimer: This is mind
warping bizarre stuff that I find hard to explain.
A great deal of fiction, and even more science has
been dedicated to the ideas of time travel. It's a popular fantasy
of children and adults everywhere to dream of a time when we can travel
either backwards to the past and learn more about the secrets of our
history, or ahead to the future to see exactly how all this mess turns
out. Time fascinates us all.
At this point, I must declare that I am not a
scientist. However, I have discovered a form of time travel that
exists already. I present to you, my theory of NOW.
The concept of NOW is time travel in itself.
NOW means different things to different people, and the extent of NOW
can change. In it's simplest form, my NOW is obviously different
from your NOW. I wrote this sentence NOW and you're reading it
NOW. Both are NOW, but unless you're looking over my shoulder,
time has passed. Perhaps a day, perhaps a year... and yet, it's
still very much NOW.
The dictionary definition of NOW fascinates me,
because each example use of NOW, actually disagrees with the definition.
If the written form of NOW is represented as "preset time when written",
then the reader viewing any written form of the word NOW is reading a
piece of the past. A NOW long gone. A THEN. ... but that's
too confusing, so we socially accept NOW to mean NOW FOR ME, the reader.
THEN is past or future, but that's a discussion for another day.
NOW spoken verbally is NOW for all who hear it,
but more on our own NOW later.
now ( P ) Pronunciation Key (nou)
adv. At the present
time: goods now on sale; the now aging dictator.
At once; immediately: Stop now.
In the immediate past; very recently: left the room just now.
At this point in the series of events; then: The ship was now
listing to port.
At times; sometimes: now hot, now cold.
Nowadays.
In these circumstances; as things are: Now we won't be able to
stay.
Used to introduce a command, reproof, or request: Now pay
attention.
Used to indicate a change of subject or to preface a remark: Now,
let's get down to work.
conj.
Seeing that; since. Often used with that: Now that spring is here,
we can expect milder weather.
n.
The present time or moment: wouldn't work up to now.
adj.
Of the present time; current: our now governor.
Slang. Currently fashionable; trendy: the now sound of this new
rock band.
Idiom:
now and again/then
Occasionally.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Middle English, from Old English n. See nu- in Indo-European
Roots.]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
nowness n.
Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language,
Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
|
The deeper understanding of NOW
However, that explanation is the silly one.
We obviously understand that the concept of NOW is not really time
travel... however, I want to examine a little deeper what NOW means to
us... and how that concept of NOW can actually distort our real meaning
of time.
Lets define NOW as a concept, to be all that we
can see without taking a step or moving our head. If I can see it
in my eye's view without moving, it is NOW. Obviously, this idea
of NOW moves forward through linear time with us, but NOW is always
"present time". As I turn my head, NOW follows me.
Technically, things happening outside my view are also NOW, but I won't
know about them until the future, at which point it will be a different
version of NOW. Even if an event happens behind me NOW, my
interpretation of that event will not occur until a future version of
NOW. I'll have to turn my head to see it.
To avoid confusion, NOW is always "Present time"
and we can refer to things that will happen, as a future now. Ok,
maybe that doesn't avoid confusion.
Our immediate NOW could be defined as the space
our existence occupies. If I stand 6 feet tall, my NOW is a radius
of 6 feet wide. (A typical human's arms' reach is always equal to our
height). Anything outside our personal space will require us to
move, or to create a new future now.
The smaller we are, the smaller our concept of NOW
must be. If my NOW is 6 feet, a shorter man may have a NOW of 5
feet. More things can happen in MY NOW than his NOW. An ant
on the other hand, has a NOW of less than an inch. It would take
an ant, several minutes to move within my NOW. I can watch the ant
walk through my now. It seems very slow. To the ant, he may
be running at an incredible pace. To another ant standing still,
he may be flying by, because one ant will pass through another ant's NOW
in less than a second. Interestingly enough, if we lay our head to
the ground, and lessen our perception of our own NOW, the ant seems to
move faster.
Now lets expand our NOW beyond our own personal
space to our own personal perception. Our NOW is actually greater
than what we can reach. Since NOW is just a concept, it actually
extends to what we can perceive - or see in the present, without effort
or motion. OUR NOW is actually all that we can see (or comprehend)
at any given moment. This can include the things we see before us,
and to a lesser extent, the things we can HEAR all around us.
This means our NOW can change, depending greatly
where we are, and how much we can see (or hear). If we are
standing 6 foot tall in a row boat in the middle of the ocean, the
horizon on each side of us is 12 miles away. Our NOW is contained
within a 24 mile circle. Anything we can see is NOW. If we
sit down, we lessen our NOW substantially, and things outside our view
become SOON, not NOW. We have to take time to view them. We
can still hear things happen outside our viewable range, and those
things obviously happen NOW - as we hear them, but we may need to take
some time (future now) to more fully comprehend what they were.
So we must conclude, our perception of NOW is
changed by distance or size? NOW is time, and we can MODIFY time,
simply by increasing distance. The farther up we go, or the larger
we get, the bigger NOW gets. As our NOW increases, things inside
our NOW become slower.
Lets expand this concept even farther. We
can expand our own NOW, simply by traveling up. If the horizon is
24 miles diameter to me at 6 feet, then obviously, it gets bigger as I
move upwards. The higher up I go, the bigger my NOW becomes.
The bigger my NOW becomes, the slower other things seem.
Have you ever been in an airplane looking down,
and the waves on the ocean seem to be almost motionless? Looking
at cars on a highway from far above, they seem to move so slowly.
By the same token, when we look to the sky, airplanes flying by
certainly don't appear to be moving 700mph or faster. In
fact, the planes higher up seem to be moving much slower than the
smaller planes lower to the ground. These are all our perceptions
of NOW. In an aircraft looking down, all that we can see is
happening NOW.
From the airplane, we don't have to move to see
any of it. Our view of NOW may be 100 miles around. Time has
stopped. NOW is huge. I can see more in my NOW than the ant
could ever hope to travel in it's lifetime. It won't appear to be
moving at all.
Take this idea even farther. From the space
shuttle, the entire EARTH is now... or at least one half of earth.
It appears still. There is no time between the entire continent of
North America and South America. They are both visible at the same
NOW. On the ground, a car could drive for weeks at top speeds, but
to the Astronaut, the distance doesn't exist. It's ALL NOW.
All within one single view in present time.
From the sun, our whole solar system would be one
NOW. From a distant galaxy, the milky-way would seem motionless
and still... all one big NOW.
I have to go lay down NOW. My brain is
tired. As I sleep, my now becomes infinite only within my dreaming
brain. |