Nobody's called you an idiot yet, have they? (Unless you're actually the OPs friend that made him ask this question on the forums, in which case they didn't know it was you they were calling an idiot). You're entirely correct, in fact, that nobody has proved that time exists. That's not exactly suprising since philosophers, neurobiologists, physicists and psychologists have spent so much time trying to explain why we perceive time as existing despite there being no proof of it.dead_beat_slacker said:If your gonna call me an idiot for not believing in the simple concept of time you're just as stupid. You still haven't proved that time exist, whither it be by Multidimensional Universes, or The measurement of distances or motion for that matter. Some people even refer to time as the 4th dimension but for some odd reason humans aren't able to detect or sense its presence. It's kind of like religion, people tend to believe in things we cant see. Am I supposed to base the existence of time on faith?....
However, you clearly do perceive a flow of time, since you are able to perform time-dependant actions such as catching a falling leaf. You must, inarguably, believe in the human perception of time since the alternative is really very strange (there are three people living on the planet, that I am aware of, that appear not to perceive time as a linear progression, they all require 24 hour dedicated care from medical professionals).
cuddly_tomato said:If you had no length - you would cease to exist.
Time is just another one of those dimensions. We perceive time differently than those other dimensions, so our brains try to tell us it is different.
A simple distance between two points in a dimension of reality.
If I were to hazard a guess, dead beat's opposition is not to the idea that people don't perceive time as passing but that time as a measurable physical quantity is inperceptible and thus impossible to prove. However, if one were to accept 'time' as a real dimensional quantity then the same goes for any other measurement of the extensibility of a spacetime event (like 'height'). The distance between two points can only be measured within a frame of reference outside those two points. In order for me to say "Point A (which has no extension) is closer to me than Point B (ditto)" I require a third event, Object 1, with an extension that encompasses myself as well as points A and B and that is continuously or linear-discretely variable over its extension.
Thus, a measurement of interval (which many people mistake for a measurement of time) is only possible with reference to an event which has extension over that interval and that is continuously or linear-discretely variable over its extension (in terms of normal language, that means we need something that continues to exist before either event and continues to exist after both events and that is different by a predictable amount at each point along its extension).
The problem is that your position in the above quote is not true. We perceive time identically to the other dimensions, we just don't appear to have any control over our position in it. If you were stored in a sealed box with a perspex window and breathing holes and put on a conveyor belt you'd probably end up combining the idea of your position in time and your position on the conveyor belt, since the two would be essentially the same.
Actually, the whole 'speed of light is special' theory has recently gone out of the window, too. Light happens to go at the top speed that mathematics allows for a universe that looks like ours. Nothing can be made to go faster than light and still interact with a universe that looks like ours. However, in roughly the same way that the magnetic field around a moving current extends into the space around it it also appears to extend into the time around it, such that it initiates events before it reaches them, the only reasonable explanation for this at the moment is that the information present in the field is extending backwards in time from the event.cuddly_tomato said:I understood that for something to move backwards in time it would have to pass the speed of light, at which point its direction through time would be opposite to ours relative to its speed?