The dimension mankind calls Time began at the instant a continuum of unbroken patterns between location and material commenced. Conversely location and material return to Chaos if either is absent.
A continuum of pattern and association is mandatory for time to ‘be’ but time is only maintained while each pattern derives from another.
The continuity of time is the fundamental attribute that separated the Big Bang from Chaos. Things we call space and substance, time, material and location were all part of the infinite ‘IS-ness’ of Chaos but they have no form while they lack the proper union that takes place in the Big Bang. From the successful marriage between time and the continuum the universe then gains its form. Each of the concepts cannot have meaning on its own but only in the marriage.
When mass-space-time are one then this union sets the laws that define the nature of the universe.
Once matter and location form a pattern they can only form a continuum if location evolves into space. There can only be a Universe of the type we know if it inherits from Chaos the ability for material to be associated with an expanding location. Space is the pattern formed by all locations of material. The source of time is the continuum formed from the pattern of locations associated with material. Elapsed time is the bounds of the continuum. The physical bounds of the universe and elapsed time are united by marriage to become the parents of the Universe. Space-time expands to define everywhere that material is located. It is this bounding property that ensures the speed of light is constant.
"At any given instant
All solids dissolve, no wheels revolve,
And facts have no endurance -
And who knows if it is by design or pure inadvertence
That the Present destroys its inherited self-importance?"
from 'For the Time Being', W. H. Auden
All solids dissolve, no wheels revolve,
And facts have no endurance -
And who knows if it is by design or pure inadvertence
That the Present destroys its inherited self-importance?"
from 'For the Time Being', W. H. Auden

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