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I'm six years old, in the car with my parents and brother, travelling back from our annual two week holiday in Conwy, North Wales. It's dark and the journey seems to take forever. I lie in the back seat, watching the orange streetlights and the houses pass by, wondering if we're ever going to get home.

My mum plays a few games with us to make the time pass faster. We listen to the radio for a while. Then I fall asleep. When I wake up it seems like I've been in the car for an eternity and I can't believe we're still not home.

This story appears to fit with most people's experience. Most of us feel that time moved very slowly when we were children and is gradually speeding up as we grow older. We've all remarked on it: how Christmas seems to come around quicker every year, how you're just getting used to writing the date of the new year on your cheques and you realise that it's almost over, how your children are about to finish school when it doesn't seem long since you were changing their nappies.

At the age of one month, a week is a quarter of your whole life, so it's inevitable that it seems to last forever. At the age of 14, one year constitutes around 7% of your life, which seems to be a large amount of time too. But at the age of 30, a week is only a tiny percentage of your life, and at 50 a year is only 2% of your life, so your subjective sense is that these are insignificant periods of time which pass very quickly.

There are also biological theories. One is that the speeding up of time is linked to how our metabolism gradually slows down as we grow older. Because children's hearts beat faster than ours, because they breathe more quickly and their blood flows more quickly, their body clocks "cover" more time within the space of 24 hours than ours do as adults.

Children live through more time simply because they're moving through time faster. Think of a clock which is set to run 25% faster than normal time: After 12 hours of normal time it has covered 15 hours, and after 24 hours of normal time it has covered 30 hours, which means that, from that clock's point of view, a day has contained more time than usual. On the other hand, older people are like clocks that run slower than normal, so that they lag behind, and cover less than 24 hours against a normal clock.

Also from a biological perspective, there is the body temperature theory. In the 1930s, the psychologist Hudson Hoagland conducted a series of experiments which showed that body temperature causes different perceptions of time. Once, when his wife was ill with the flu and he was looking after her, he noticed that she complained that he'd been away for a long time even if he was only away for a few moments. With admirable scientific detachment, Hoagland tested her perception of time at different temperatures and found that the higher her temperature, the more time seemed to slow down for her, and the longer she experienced each time period.

Hoagland followed this up with several semi-sadistic experiments with students, which involved them enduring temperatures of up to 65C and wearing heated helmets. These showed that raising a person's body temperature can slow down their sense of time passing by up to 20%. And the important point here may be that children have a higher body temperature than adults, which may mean that time is "expanded" for them. And in a similar way, our body temperature gradually lowers.

In my view, the best way of explaining the speeding up of time is through what I call the perceptual theory. This is the explanation I present in my book Making Time. In my view, the speeding up of time we experience is mainly related to our perception of the world around us and of our experiences, and how this perception changes as we grow older.

He found that this applied to the complexity of the information too. When they were asked to examine different drawings and paintings, the participants with the most complex images estimated the time period to be longest.

And once we become adults, there is a process of progressive familiarisation which continues throughout our lives. The longer we're alive, the more familiar the world becomes, so that the amount of perceptual information we absorb decreases with every year, and time seems to pass faster every year.

Incidentally, this link between time and information can explain other aspects of time too. One of the "laws" of psychological time which I set out in Making Time is that "time seems to slow down when we're exposed to new environments and experiences." This is because the unfamiliarity of new experiences allows us to take in more information.

Another of the laws is that "time goes quickly in states of absorption." This is because in states of absorption our attention narrows to one small focus and we block out information from our surroundings. At the same time there is very little cognitive information in our minds, since the concentration has quietened the normal thought chatter of the mind. On the other hand, time goes slowly in states of boredom and discomfort because in these situations our attention isn't occupied and thought-chatter flows through our minds, bringing a massive amount of cognitive information.

'Pastime' is a noun that refers to an activity that one enjoys doing for leisure or pleasure. It is a hobby or interest that one engages in regularly or occasionally for fun or relaxation. For example:

'Pass time', on the other hand, is a verb phrase that means to spend time doing something, usually to occupy oneself. This can be any activity that one engages in to kill time or to make the time pass more quickly. For example:

Per this question (How much time passes on the Astral plane relative to the Material plane?), time in the Astral Plane passed relatively normal to Material time back in 3.5E days, but is this still true in 5E? If it matters, I'd like to know specifically for Forgotten Realms.

If you look at Astral Refuge and Astral Sequestration, class features of the Seeker warlock, it implies time is passing slower in the Material plane than in the Astral plane. Is this actually true of the plane, or just some kind of time-warping warlock magic?

This explains some of the apparent time-stopping strangeness that visiting this plane gives you. However, there is no mention of time itself flowing differently in this plane relative to the Material Plane.

There is, however, similar language for the Ethereal Plane. This is further evidence that, had the designers intended for time to pass differently in some plane, they would have made a specific mention of that.

Time technically DOES NOT PASS AT ALL in the astral plane. The answers in the 5e DMG are relative simplifications of the elaborate explanations from earlier editions. One thing to note, officially, a player may think they can go to the astral plane to cheat time... spending a millennium training or whatnot... it doesn't work like that. As soon as a body leaves the astral plane time catches up. Poisoning in the astral plain doesn't kick in until they leave and natural healing does not occur in the astral plane. Upon departing the astral plane to a prime or otherwise, a body will be incredibly hungry. (More or less citing A Player's Guide to the Astral Plane).

That being said... time is 'experienced' in the astral plane and the subjective time experienced could be whatever the DM desires it to be. A body in the astral plane is technically experiencing events, it is up to the DM to simply consider the nature of those events and whether to apply parallels to what that observation of time would be in a different plane or to come up with something radically different.

This question may have been asked before; actually, it's definitely been asked before, since it's on the topic of whether time is real or a man-made construct, but I don't believe it has yet been asked in this specific way.

That is, if everything in the universe suddenly stopped, would there really be any time at all? Let's say we were creatures floating around in a space where literally NOTHING happens that we can clearly say came after something else. Would we ever come up with a definition of time?

Is time something fundamental, or a concept invented to describe how we experience events (and what even IS an event; I'm thinking about motion, including the motion of subatomic particles, but is that the correct interpretation)?

I'd say you're on the right track in suggesting that there is an existential connection between change and time. Thus the Perennialists and mystics are able to deny the reality of time only because they also deny the reality of change and the things that change. It has to be all or nothing for the reasons you sketch out.

What you are suggesting, it seems to me, is that time is conceptual. Thus where there is no change in our mind then there is no time passing. Further, if mind is transcended then time must be likewise since its passing is not experienced.

Thus your question leads us straight to Kant and onward into mysticism without passing go. If you want to go there then I could recommend Abhidhamma Studies: Buddhist Explorations of Consciousness and Time by Nyaponika Thera.

Ernst Mach and Julian Barbour suggest that time is our perception of change, and perhaps that's one of the best definitions of time I've found. The only physical fact lying under such definition is change, which we can perceive subjectively. 589ccfa754

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