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Spatial Time (not existential time)

Spatial Time is a concept of time that is based on the physical movement of an object between 2 points in 3D space. Spatial Time is in effect the physical change required to move an object away from a starting point, Point "1", to its' stopping point, Point "2".

The distance between these 2 points in 3D space can be used to define a unit of time as defined by humans. That unit can be defined as a "second", a "minute", or even a "year". A single human can and has served as the "Absolute Source" for any unit of time or length as defined by that single human. Other humans can accept and use the same unit for time or length which exists today.

In the past, humans realized that there are cycles of light and darkness which humans eventually defined as "a day". Humans also noted that the Moon appeared on a cyclic basis with different shapes. Humans decided to invent a unit of "change" now known as "the hour" and that there should be 12 units of light and 12 units of night. Humans determined that the earth rotated through 3D space and defined the unit of "change" from sun ray at a point on earth would repeat after 12 units of lunar cyclic motion. This was defined as "a year".

A point in 3D space is the cross-section at which 3 linear lines intersect. Such a point requires the existence of 6 defined points in 3D space.