'Depth' could just be a human concept to describe relative position in space.
Depth is a purely human concept, that developed in an arena where it was conceived there was an absolute 'up/down' in relation to what transpired to be a purely local gravitational effect. Over time we've adopted the term as a convenient bit of terminology to use in depicting three orthogonal physical direction which we tend to apply in a purely relative fashion in the absence of any overall directional constant.
If you are static and look at the night sky are you observing deep into space or high into space?
That rather depends on how you set up your reference frame - the point is though, not whether or not it should be called 'depth' but rather if I close my eyes does it disappear. Sriram was suggesting that time was illusory, and change was the reality, I invoked 'depth' (and put in quotes to show it was a particular usage) as a corollary. It's an imperfect analogy, of course, but then most analogies are.
When the observing mind disappears so does the concept.
Yes, but the underlying reality that the concept crystallises in our though processes doesn't. Distance doesn't cease to exist because we aren't looking any more.
Similarly, time could just be a concept used to indicate and compare relative changes e.g. the decay of a caesium particle or the movement of a clock hand or a photon.
It could be, but in periods of no change we still have time passing. In cases where we move at different speeds, constant rate of change processes change at different relative rates - that requires an independent time variable, it can't be solely change happening because it's happening differently with respect to...?
Stasis is another concept which implies absence of change. If this were to be absolute then time as a concept ceases to have meaning and existence would be changeless and non time-dependant.
How would it? We might know, because our mental activity would mean that there wasn't stasis, but why would stasis mean time didn't exist. If time didn't exist, how could the stasis have anything to exist within?
O.