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barbarianhorde wrote:From lights view everything we see that light bounces off when it dies to our retina, everything that we see (we don't see light obviously light makes us see) is like a really thin black pencil line of 1 dimension. So from lights frame, wherever it is, the world basically doesn't exist. Im sure other light exists though. Probably light can reference the difference between other lights even though between it is hardly anything at all, just a pencil line or some undefined nothing like a girl will say in a bar about her boyfriend when the night is well played. All falls away except the light. We are not light so we cant really see what light would see if it could see. But I bet God could if he exists.
Silhouette wrote:Aren't we forgetting relativity? Doesn't light travel at the speed of light relative to every reference point?
Presumably this applies to the point of "view" of light too, so light travels at the speed of light relative to light as well - and therefore if light had some "eye-like" way of seeing that which light interacts with, it would see no differently to any organism with a similarly working eye.
Serendipper, light doesn't travel instantly - unless you're defining an instant as some minimal quantum of time that it can take for something to travel any given distance that corresponds to the universal speed limit.
Does light actually behave like a wave that you can cancel with another wave that's fully out of phase with it? Like sound? I've not heard of anything that corroborates this, but maybe you have?
Serendipper wrote:Silhouette wrote:Serendipper, light doesn't travel instantly - unless you're defining an instant as some minimal quantum of time that it can take for something to travel any given distance that corresponds to the universal speed limit.
From light's point of view it travels instantly and I can offer two pieces of evidence supporting that:
"From the perspective of a photon, there is no such thing as time. It's emitted, and might exist for hundreds of trillions of years, but for the photon, there's zero time elapsed between when it's emitted and when it's absorbed again. It doesn't experience distance either." https://phys.org/news/2014-05-does-ligh ... e.html#jCp
Silhouette wrote:Serendipper wrote:Silhouette wrote:Serendipper, light doesn't travel instantly - unless you're defining an instant as some minimal quantum of time that it can take for something to travel any given distance that corresponds to the universal speed limit.
From light's point of view it travels instantly and I can offer two pieces of evidence supporting that:
"From the perspective of a photon, there is no such thing as time. It's emitted, and might exist for hundreds of trillions of years, but for the photon, there's zero time elapsed between when it's emitted and when it's absorbed again. It doesn't experience distance either." https://phys.org/news/2014-05-does-ligh ... e.html#jCp
To address this piece of evidence, I'm not sure I buy the mechanism of the argument.
The first part of the argument describes how the faster you move relative to e.g. Earth, the slower your clocks become relative to the clocks on Earth.
But your speed tends towards a speed limit, not to infinity. If your speed could tend towards infinity, then you would end up traveling to any given point in an instant (time and distance not experienced), but in this case the tendency towards infinity is bounded by the speed of light, so you don't quite reach any given point instantly.
The second part of the argument relies on this first part to conclude that photons reach zero distance and zero time. No, they tend towards zero, but are bounded by the speed of light so never quite reach zero of either dimension.
As to the Feynman idea, this argument would make no sense if light traveled instantly. This is because there could be no time for any advanced photon to travel back in time to arrive at the source, as the source would instantly be at the advanced photon already (and vice versa - so they would be the same photon having zero time to start at different points in time and meet one another at the destination).
And as to the wave phase idea, I was hesitant to accept the idea because of the concept wave/particle duality - your notion seemed to treat light solely as a wave. I'll bear it in mind though, considering what you've backed your assertion with.
Gamer wrote:If you give me some anustheshia and transport me to France in a crate and barrel, I might, in the right circumstance, perceive that no time has elapsed. That doesn't mean it didn't. Check and mate.
If light has the gall to think it doesn't "move" over a period of "time" then light is a retard, and a tool. Regardless of what its hypothetical eyes tell him, he is indeed moving through time and space. This has been proven by Professor Einstein and again by Dr. Steven Hawken. Proof speeks for istelf.
Sound, on the other hand, doesn't travel. It is proven faster than light. When you hit something and it vibrates it creates a quantum entanglement noise that is felt on the other side of the galaxy instantly. Nobody knows why this is except me as I did research on it in a lab and didn't tell anyone, the government was involved, and it was on CNN if you don't believe me you can do a lexus nexus search. If you need access keys to the lexus IM me.
barbarianhorde wrote:From lights view everything we see that light bounces off when it dies to our retina, everything that we see (we don't see light obviously light makes us see)
is like a really thin black pencil line of 1 dimension.
So from lights frame, wherever it is, the world basically doesn't exist.
Im sure other light exists though.
Probably light can reference the difference between other lights even though between it is hardly anything at all, just a pencil line or some undefined nothing like a girl will say in a bar about her boyfriend when the night is well played. All falls away except the light. We are not light so we cant really see what light would see if it could see. But I bet God could if he exists.
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