The principle of magnitivity refers to the magnitive time, that is, the existing, measurable, flowing, sequential and non-observable time. Magnitive time is reached by intuition.
The following diagram represents two different states (before and after) of the same phenomenon:
B: --->
A: ------------>
The arrow indicates the progress of the phenomenon.
A contains B.
In B the arrow is passed in relation to the arrow in A.
In A the arrow may be present or future in relation to the arrow in B.
The principle of magnitivity arises from the definition of time: it is the continuous succession of changes or phenomena that go from the past to the future. In this definition, succession is the action of the verb happen.
The principle of magnitivity governs all the processes of nature: physical, chemical, biological, historical, etc.
Elvis Sibilia
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