Again the science of what you are saying is sound but as it is not relevant to some of the points I am making i.e. not all my questions have received answers. it is as they say ''showing off on the beach''.
Have you thought that it might be you not being very clear about what you are asking? The problem is that you keep on saying stuff like "the science of what you are saying is sound" or something else that implies that you get what I'm saying and then you ask something that suggests that you don't get it at all.
It seems convenient that you seem to have wrapped up past, present and future indistinguishably in the space time manifold which itself must be the mother and father of mysteries wrapped up in an enigma...
It's somewhat counter-intuitive is all - it's the epitome of clarity compared to QM/QFT. It's a perfectly self-consistent mathematical construct that predicts the results of experiments and observation with incredible accuracy.
...having said that I think we are leaning towards futureS.....since there is no ''the'' future....... being theoretical at present.
Future
s is a bit more like it.
I found this diagram that illustrates what I was saying in
#317:-
Space-time EventObviously 'space' has been reduced to one dimension in order to fit space-time on a 2d diagram.
It depicts a space-time
event O (a single point in space at a single instant in time), and its relationship with space and time. The fixed points of reference are the paths that light takes (marked "light-like"), not fixed space and time axes (which are always relative to an observer). The upper time-like region is O's unambiguous future, the lower time-like region is its past. Any events in the space-like region are not unambiguously in O's past or future, it depends on the observer's reference frame. So E
1 is in O's future, whereas E
3 can be in its future or its past depending on the observer.
As you can see, the further into O's future you go, the more 'space' is included - its unambiguous future spreads out at the speed of light. Likewise, the further away from the event you go, the more 'time' the space-like region incorporates.