Time.HTM Update Log
2006
- Febuary 25th: large revision, includes links to universe.exe
- February 9th: minor changes, added metaphysics and history
sections, notes
- January 23rd: yet another large re-write
2005
- April 29th: I had been working on another idea, called Zenetics, which was the theory of
consciousness that complimented the Multiple Natures. In this revision
I synthiezed the basic of zenetics (which will very likely be
abandonded) into the new Consciousness section
- April 28th: more reworking
- March 22nd: used the digital clock as an example of how to derive
predictions, and reworked the conclusion to make a prediction about
event horizons
- January 16th: reworking of introduction and flow of the paper
- January 10th: a couple of minor additions thanks to review by
David Haskell
- January 2nd: Sections II and III on The Model and Time. Also
small corrections to the pre-existing Introduction
2004
- December 28th: minor grammar and style corrections
- December 27th: Say hello to
rewrite 21. In this version I've made
many changes. For starters no more "fundamental." Just "absolute." Also
a big change is that I've stopped refering to absolute nature, also
known as the universe and objective reality in this version, as
non-existent. Far too many people have a problem with that, despite it
being as simple as a terminology issue, so there you go.
- November 19th: added paragraphs about special relativity, minor
grammar fixes, added more links
- November 16th: made modifications based on Jonny's
reviews; also changed name to "Multiple Natures Conjecture"
- November 15th: rewrote the entire structure of the document. I
don't know how many rewrites that makes, but for the sake of record
keeping, I'm going to arbitrarily guess it was 20.
Time.HTM History
Here is the very first version of this web page that I could locate,
archived by Google Groups, July 17th, 2003:
http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&safe=off&selm=a6db6e7.0307172025.78f5befc%40posting.google.com
Pretty pathetic, huh? At the time it was called "Observation of Time
and Resulting Theories." That still has an interesting ring to it.
In any case, on UseNet I've made plenty of text dumps so the history of
the paper is fairly researchable there.
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