Edgar is on the right track, but I need to point out his fundamental 
error. There is indeed a different time from clock time. But it's not 
called P-time, it's called U-time and every moment does not occur at the 
same time across the universe for all observers. Rather, no two events can 
ever occur at the same time (in U-time), because every moment is Unique! 
Hence U-time. See what I did there? Of course, I can't prove this 
hypothesis because U-time is conveniently unmeasurable and incommunicable. 
But the implications are profound. I'm amazed nobody has realized this 
obvious truth before. But well done Edgar on getting so close.

On Tuesday, December 24, 2013 6:10:13 AM UTC+11, Edgar L. Owen wrote:
>
> All,
>
> The proof is simply the fact that the time traveling twins meet up again 
> with different clock times, but always in the exact same present moment. 
> This proves beyond any doubt there are two kinds of time, clock time which 
> varies by relativistic observer, and the time of the present moment (what I 
> call P-time) which is absolute and common to all observers across the 
> universe.
>
> When this is realized there are a number of profound implications. 
>
> First that time travel outside the common present moment is impossible 
> since all of reality (the entire universe) exists within/is the common 
> present moment. The only time travel that is possible is having different 
> clock times within the same shared present moment.
>
> Second, that this is compatible with only one cosmological geometry, named 
> that the universe is a 4-dimensional hypersphere with P-time (not clock 
> time) as its continually extending radial dimension. That is cosmological 
> space is positively curved and finite. In fact we all see all 4-dimensions 
> of this geometry all the time and visually verify this, as the radial 
> P-time dimension is seen as distance in every direction from every point in 
> the 3-dimensional space of the hypersphere's surface.
>
> What amazes me is that no one recognized this simple obvious fact prior to 
> my stating it in my 1997 paper 'Spacetime and Consciousness'. It's a great 
> example of how the trivially obvious can remain unrecognized, no matter how 
> important, if it isn't part of the accepted world view of, in this case, 
> either common sense or science.....
>
> Edgar
>
>
>
>
>

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