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Disclaimer: I admit that I don't really know how trees grow, but I have questions.
Are parts of the tree much younger than the rest of the plant?
That is, if there are new branches or the trunk increases in diameter over time, would the age of the parts range from zero to to one thousand year?
Apparently the difficult word is "old", hence this whole discussion.I didn't start this thread so you skeptics can ask me a thousand questions.
Which word in the OP is hard to understand?
If you believe what you say, why do you insist on saying the tree is 1000 years old when its "physical age" must be significantly greater than that?Wouldn't you, if you cored it and found 1000 rings?
The tree is 1000 years old, period.If you believe what you say, why do you insist on saying the tree is 1000 years old when its "physical age" must be significantly greater than that?
The tree is 1000 years old, period.
1000 years ago, the tree was just a seed in the ground.
Take it from there.
(The OP shouldn't be that hard a question.)
I agree.The canoe is one day old, period.
Or a tree.One day ago, the canoe was a pile of lumber.
No, I sure didn't.(notice how quickly you abandon your own "physical vs. existnetial age" nonsense the moment it becomes inconvenient?)
I agree.
Or a tree.
No, I sure didn't.
The canoe is one day old, possessing the maturity of a 1000 year-old tree.
I agree.
Or a tree.
No, I sure didn't.
The canoe is one day old, possessing the maturity of a 1000 year-old tree.
So time is not relative. Time is statical?
Time is measured by constant periodical processes. The swing of a pendulum, the passing of celestial objects, energetic vibrations of certain atoms... these kind of processes.
Yes, and these processes are "statical" if occuring in the same reference system.
Yes, that is what I read... but I don´t understand your idea of "being relative" in this context.The question was how can varify time being relative with statical clocks?
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