The Natural Philosophy of TimeClarendon Press, 1980 - 399 Seiten |
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Seite 69
... objects or movements and subordinate to space . Piaget has found that if , at the age of four or five years , a child sees two moving objects leave the same point and arrive simultaneously at two different terminal points he will ...
... objects or movements and subordinate to space . Piaget has found that if , at the age of four or five years , a child sees two moving objects leave the same point and arrive simultaneously at two different terminal points he will ...
Seite 287
... objects . To determine To , it was necessary to advance beyond the so - called Local Group ( comprising the Andromeda Nebula , the Milky Way , and some lesser systems such as the Magellanic Clouds ) and estimate the distances of some ...
... objects . To determine To , it was necessary to advance beyond the so - called Local Group ( comprising the Andromeda Nebula , the Milky Way , and some lesser systems such as the Magellanic Clouds ) and estimate the distances of some ...
Seite 358
... object or observer whose relative speed exceeds c . Just as photons must be sharply distinguished from material particles , so the objects , if any , which move faster than photons cannot be composed of ordinary matter . Nevertheless ...
... object or observer whose relative speed exceeds c . Just as photons must be sharply distinguished from material particles , so the objects , if any , which move faster than photons cannot be composed of ordinary matter . Nevertheless ...
Inhalt
UNIVERSAL TIME | 1 |
HUMAN TIME | 48 |
BIOLOGICAL TIME | 123 |
Urheberrecht | |
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according activity animals appears argued argument assigned associated assumed attention become believed biological body brain called clock concept concerned conclusion Consequently considered constant continuous corresponding definition depends determined direction discussion distance distinct duration effect Einstein's equation essential evidence example existence experience fact follows formula function fundamental future given hence hypothesis idea increase independent infinite instant interval involved later less light London mathematical matter means measure mechanism memory mind Moreover motion moving nature Nevertheless objects observer obtained occur organisms origin particles particular past perception period philosophers physical position possible precedes present Press principle problem processes reference regarded relation relative respect result reversal rhythms scale sense sequence signal similar simultaneous space spatial Special Relativity speed succession suggested temperature temporal theory thought uniform universe whereas whole