Units are arbitrary. Milk is a thing. We measure it in gallons. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Units are not completely arbitrary. Yes, of course we can use gallons or liters to measure volume, but the dimensionality of volume is always distance cubed. We can't just arbitrarily decide volume should be distance squared plus time.
There are some historical examples of people misunderstanding the dimensionality of units and making poor choices. The easiest example is the equivalence of the English pound mass with pound weight - something that gave me no end of headaches in school.
I don't think that was me; if you can quote or link to my post, that would help.
No, that's fine. If I misattributed, my apologies.
Whether that means spacetime is a 'thing' or not, I don't know. Concepts like 'real' and 'thing' are hard to pin down, and typically have ambiguous definitions that vary with context.
True, but it does have implications.
Why would we want to change it? why would the 'thingness' of spacetime be relevant?
I really don't know what you mean. Time is what clocks (e.g. the frequency transitions of caesium 133) measure. Our model of spacetime tells us that time is dynamic rather than absolute, and our observations have confirmed those expectations.
You are correct, so I suppose an example is in order.
When studying the vibration of structures, the typical equation (case 1) uses a linear differential equation with trig functions for a solution. However, this solution doesn't correlate well to all cases. As such, some nonlinear equations (case 2) have been proposed as an alternative. The interesting consequence of nonlinear equations is that they imply the potential for chaos. Sometimes tests demonstrate chaos for these systems, sometimes they don't.
In cases where neither the circular trig functions nor the nonlinear functions seem an appropriate solution, there is yet a third possibility - (case 3) Jacobi elliptic functions. In all 3 cases, the argument of these functions is taken to be time. Yet, with elliptic functions one faces an interesting choice.
The elliptic sine can be denoted sn(t,k), where t = time, k = modulus. If denoted this way, the solution is nonlinear and becomes just a special version of case 2.
The elliptic sine can also be denoted sin(am(z,k)), where, if Non-Newtonian calculus is used, time = am(z,k) and the solution is linear ... no chaos implied, yet a better fit than case 1. The philosophical implication is that time is being redefined to suit the properties of the system (i.e. its eccentricity).