Finding Time

Have you ever taken Integral Calculus while in college? I have. It took several math courses in preparation to get at that level. While leading up to second-year calculus, there were differential equations and approximation methods to quantify and interpret shapes, energy, matter, or behaviors of any object.

The primary point was to understand that you could express any shape or signal as a math equation within integral calculus. And that math equation shows what its build or properties were. For example, a circular object has a radius, circumference, or diameter. Or if there is a volume of a sphere, that formula is expressed a 4/3pir^3 (can’t believe I remember that).

Say that sphere is instead understood, measured, or sliced as discs that fit its shape. That is, to add up an infinite number of infinitely small slice segments of that sphere to get at its true and most understood definition. Since Integral Calculus is derived from summation principles over a range of static and dynamic changes, the math proves an effective way of understanding how things are or operate. Calculus and its prerequisite courses are required for the multiple Basic and Engineering Physics courses I have had to complete.

Consider time. Or a series of events across time. More precisely said, an infinite number of infinitely small events added all together as time segments. Where in the universe, according to Einstein, time exists in its fullness, but not as a fixed tense (past, present, or future). That time is an illusion and where an event or happenstance is a matter of perspective and motion. When a body moves away from an object, time slows down, and it enters into the past. And when moving toward an object, time speeds up and the body enters into the future concerning the same object reference.

God most certainly does exist. This is how YHWH is omnipresent and eternal. It is because God exists independent of what was created to include its various dimensions or properties. And YHWH is independent of the dimension of time. To us, time does unfold, and that leaves one wondering what other dimensions outside of space and time we are oblivious to. Physicists worldwide agree that there are numerous.

About

Servant of Christ Jesus. U.S. Military Veteran, Electrical Engineer, Pepperdine MBA, and M.A. Biblical and Theological Studies.

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