>>11617723If you imagine time as a road, and our perception is the progression on that road, faster perception means higher speed. So im moving on that road at 100 mph, and say you are moving at 99.9998 mph, then every hour the distance between us keeps growing. That distance is our position in time.
Now shrink the time scale to nanoseconds, and say that in some time interval t, i process x information, and we know you processed less during that interval, that means that you and i are on different timelines.
Lets go back up in scale just do demonstrate more strongly:
If you and I are in a room, and it takes you 1 hour to process light waves hitting your eyes.
After 5 minutes together in that room, I leave. from that moment, it takes you 1 hour to register that occurence, so what you see is me in front of you for an hour, but in my timeline i left the room after 5 minutes.
We cant even imagine an hour, but if we imagine 3 microseconds of difference (which is definetly feasible) and we keep that as a constant, as time moves on, we will see a completely different reality.
Another way to see it,