Ewe: What does it look like?
Eye: Time looks like a memory.
Eye: No, no, no. Not a memory of an event! A memory
that might not be remembered yet.
Ewe: What do you mean, "Not remembered
yet?"
Eye: I mean that an event that a person remembers as part
of his/her past that xe remembers.
Eye: Ok, imagine a fifteen year old girl remembering her
sweet-sixteenth birthday party.
Ewe: How could a fifteen year old girl remember her
sixteenth birthday?
Eye: Well, she'd probably have to be a psychic or
something if you're talking about the kind of memory I think your talking
about.
Ewe: Well what the hell are you talking
about?
Eye: The way I see time doesn't have to do only with
visual memories and visual images. I use vision in this instance because my
other sensory perceptions are not as. . . different.
Ewe: So then, how is time related to
vision?
Eye: Well, the most easily noticeable ways involve the
speed of light, and stuuf like that.
Ewe: Like when you see something. .
.{Duh!)
Eye: Yeah. However, one can notice time, apart from
light, just by looking at velocity.
Ewe: Velocity? Like distance/elapsed-time
?
Eye: Yep. Any event that has something to do with
velocity also has something to do with time. Absolutely every physical object
express velocity in some way [Creation]. Of course, there are other forms of time.
Eye: Like the kind of time a clock points to.
Ewe: What kind of time is that?
Eye: That is the kind of time that tells how many times
an electrical circuit circulates its current in a given period [e.g. from
sundown to sunset]. . . or, the number of revolutions a gear makes in a given
period of time for all those analogue folk.
Ewe: And by that you mean . . . what?
Eye: I mean . . . for example, the number of times you
stop to smell a rose, or a garbage can, if that's your forte. Time consists
of two parts. Movement and repetition. Space gives time a place to show off
its stuff.