Palačinka (or palačinky, for plural)
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It’s a bit more complicated than that. One of the consequences of theory of relativity was the realisation that time and space cannot be separated and it only make sense to speak of “spacetime”, a four-dimensional continuum rather than just three as we thought until that point. As far as I understand it, time is not really different from the other dimensions, it just seems that way to us.
I heard an explanation that has to do with entropy - the total amount of entropy is always increasing (I’m not going to even try to explain this since I only barely understand that myself) and the act of encoding information (whether we’re talking a brain forming a new memory, a computer storing some data, or me writing this comment) is a process that always increases entropy, therefore any kind of memories can only be of things in the past rather than the future, and so every moment of our lives feels like “now”, the boundary between the written and the unwritten. I don’t think we’re actually moving in time. It’s just an illusion.
That said, while my earlier explanation is simplified and probably contains a ton of inaccuracies, I’m fairly confident it’s accurate in broad strokes. This comment though, I’m not nearly as confident this is the current scientific consensus. Just what makes sense to me, so take it with a grain of salt.
If you’re interested in stuff like this, I cannot recommend The Elegant Universe by Brian Greene enough. Unlike me he’s someone who actually knows exactly what he’s talking about and he explains everything much better than I ever could.
OK, so what we discovered was that if we look far into the universe, all stuff is moving away from us (we can measure that using the famous red shift). Additionally, the farther something is, the faster it is moving away from us.
Now the simplest explanation would be that the Earth just happens to be exactly in the middle of this expansion. However, it is much more reasonable to assume our location in the universe is not special in any way and that you’d see things moving away from you if you did these measurements anywhere else. If that is so, the universe is expanding, everywhere. There’s more space in the universe every second and there’s still the same amout of matter, hence it is becoming larger, emptier and colder.
The next step is to look back and think of how the universe looked in the past. Since it’s getting bigger and bigger, it must have been smaller before and if you go back in time enough you’ll find a tiny universe that still has the same total amount of matter in it, just densely packed into possibly just a single point. Hard to say what preceded that moment, but we can predict a universe which started as an incredibly energetic singularity which exploded out and has been growing ever since. We call that moment the Big Bang and if anything, that is the centre from which everything is expanding. Not found somewhere in space but in time.
Back to the balloon analogy, the centre would be the deflated little thing you start with. Maybe a better analogy would be the little clump of molten glass at the end of a glassblower’s pipe. He begins to blow, the big bang happens, expansion starts. Fast forward 13.7 billion years (which happens to be today) - the glass has expanded into a large spherical object and there’s some tiny people living on it.
They only live on the surface of the glass and the sphere is so huge (or they are so tiny) that they can’t even tell that their world is spherical. They measure distances to some other specs littered across the glass and find that they are all moving away from them, faster the farther they are. Their universe is expanding, but where is the centre of expansion? They cannot point to it, because they only live in two dimensions, fully defined by the sufrace of the sphere. But if they could point in a direction perpendicular to all the spacial dimensions they know, they could point to the point where the sphere started, long in their past.
So the right question is not form “where” the universe expands but “whence”. The Big Bang. The very start. Somewhere far in time, which is just another direction, perpendicular to up, left, forward.
No, for the same reason you can’t find a point a balloon is expanding from on its surface. Everything is expanding everywhere.
Nah, this thing with the planet moving under you is stupid because it assumes a fixed reference frame which is not a thing in our universe. Any movement is always relative to something. You can’t just “stay in place”. Having the Earth move from under you is very arbitrary.
I’ve had enough of these motherfucking scripts on this motherfucking PC!
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Do you know anyone in real life that uses Lemmy?2·2 months agoThrough Lemmy?
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•The government doesn't use SQL2·2 months agoHeidrich died by personally chasing after antifascists who happened to have a grenade.
That’s a fucked up way to describe the assassination.
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•The government doesn't use SQL7·2 months agoYou say that with confidence so I’m going to trust you on that 100%.
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•The government doesn't use SQL5·2 months agoYeah. If you ever fly a rocket, you want to fly low and slow to be safe.
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Can someone change my mind about CRT and DEI?4·2 months agoYou’re definitely my favourite race-ist.
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Can someone change my mind about CRT and DEI?18·2 months agoI like how you made all about a race. Nice touch.
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is the origin of your username/nickname?1·3 months agoI know this, but I still always read it as “bulldozer” for some reason.
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•If a vampire asks you if they may enter your home, and you answer "you may not" ...2·3 months agoThat is yet to be decided in the courtroom of sitcom based on that exact premise.
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•If a vampire asks you if they may enter your home, and you answer "you may not" ...3·3 months agoThat only applies if you stick around haunting the house. If your soul moves on the house is no longer yours.
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•If a vampire asks you if they may enter your home, and you answer "you may not" ...19·3 months agoOr stab a stake in their heart! If they are a vampire, they will either instantly turn to dust or at least be paralysed, so you can easily dispose of them.
Otherwise it’s going to be just ordinary murder.
Klear@sh.itjust.worksto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Relative size comparison of social media platforms (December 2023)English1·1 year agoI have five lemmy accounts and only post from two. That checks out.
Lucky bastards.