Yeah, and basic physics says there are only 3 dimensions while advanced physics says there may be up to 11

    • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
      ·
      3 years ago

      Because c (the speed of light) is one of few fixed universal constants. Length and mass and even time can be sort of distorted (this comes with a lot of fine print), but the speed of light stays the same.

      My best explanation is that there is a base rate at which the universe unfolds or progresses, and then there are things that are physically displaced at a rate slower than that. Say 10 units of distance can be crossed in 10 "steps" of time, but there are things that take a more meandering route, and that move less distance than the default with each step, so they take maybe 1 million steps to cross those 10 units. Electricity in an object might have a speed close to light, but the object as a whole is effectively much slower, because it takes exponentially more energy to get the large object going that fast.

        • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
          ·
          3 years ago

          Everything gets weird down below the scale that we're visually and intuitively familiar with. Probably because our reality emerges from a huge amount of complex interactions on the smaller levels.

          Here's maybe a better example. You press play and some simple things go in straight lines. Atoms have their electron clouds pulsing/rotating at the default speed, but as a whole they go a lot slower. An electron goes through chlorophyll on a roller coaster-like trajectory at the same (-ish) speed that a photon goes through space. More massive molecules and objects have charges inside them moving at the default speed, but they themselves have a slower pace than the little bits that zip around at the default speed.

          It's helpful to think of it not so much as a matter of speed, compared to 0, but slowness, compared to c.