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Sunday, August 10, 2014

THE INTERVAL IN THE PHILOCHRONY

An interval is the distance between two points in space or time. The definition given by dictionaries about interval is incorrect, because in the time there can be no space or distance, but continuous activity (CA) with orderly pace (OP). This is the CAOP. In a time interval there is activity, no space. The space alone is motionless. The CAOP is manifested in all phenomena: physical, chemical, biological, meteorological, etc. The measure of time (duration) does not measure distance, measures the CAOP. 

Examples of CAOP are astronomical cycles: 
- The succession of day and night. 
- The succession of the seasons in the year. 
- The phases of the Moon. 
Conventionally, we have the succession of days and months (names). 

In all processes we find the CAOP. This is an universal principle. This explanation is to establish the difference between the intervals of space and time. In the space bodies move from one place to another and in the time beings pass from one moment to another.

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