What I did yesterday when watching the documentary about gravitational waves on Netflix is that what we call a relative, in fact, may be what is called fixed laws.
I'm not a physicist or scientist, just want to spend what I did when watching.
Imagine this:
Now imagine this molecule this birthday cake as the laws of physics. They seem fixed, because until now the are. But if you move any of them in any direction, but never off each other, you actually have other laws being written but perceived different ways, thus creating other laws, which seem in the eyes of those who see, repositioned, as relative.
What happens then is that the laws are fixed, but it's realignment makes for at times of view.
This is it.
I'm not a physicist or scientist, just want to spend what I did when watching.
Imagine this:
Now imagine this molecule this birthday cake as the laws of physics. They seem fixed, because until now the are. But if you move any of them in any direction, but never off each other, you actually have other laws being written but perceived different ways, thus creating other laws, which seem in the eyes of those who see, repositioned, as relative.
What happens then is that the laws are fixed, but it's realignment makes for at times of view.
This is it.
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