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by dataflow
791 days ago
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Something about this doesn't make sense. This means that, from its own perspective, every photon is emitted at time T at location x, then absorbed at time T at location y, meaning there is no time "in between" those... yet somehow, at a distinct point in between those events, an object can get in the way and block the photon from reaching point y. Meaning you have two points in time that have the same value but aren't identical? How does that work, mathematically? Do you need nonstandard calculus or something to make sense of it? |
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Reality is stranger than fiction!!