Non-Linear and Non-Dual
In contrast to relative time which is linear (past--present--future), absolute time contains all temporalities simultaneously, so that past, present and future are one inseparable unity.
Ontological Field
Absolute time can be understood as a metaphysical vibrational field that structures and connects all of existence, similar to the concept of quantum fields in fundamental physics, but with an intrinsically inherent temporal dimension.
3.1.2 Philosophical and Scientific Basis
Newtonian Absolute Time Philosophy and Its Criticism
Isaac Newton once put forward the idea of absolute time as a fixed and universal background. Although Einstein's theory of relativity later replaced this concept with relative time, this postulate revived a deeper and more integrated version: absolute time is not a mechanistic background, but a dynamic ontological reality that transcends relativity.
Modernization of the Concept of Absolute Time
With a multidisciplinary approach, absolute time is no longer passive mechanical time, but rather an active ontological field that can be accessed through awareness and resonance---unifying aspects of physics, metaphysics, and phenomenological experience.
Relevance in Field Theory and Multiverse
In modern physics, the concept of quantum fields and the structure of the multiverse opens up the possibility of a more fundamental temporal dimension. This postulate proposes that absolute time is the fundamental field that organizes and coheres the entire temporality of the multiverse.
3.1.3 Implications of the Postulate of Absolute Time Ontology
Become single frame of reference for all temporal phenomena that emerge in various systems---physical, biological, psychological, and social.
Opening up possibilities absolute time mathematics and physics as a fundamental vibrational field, with resonance parameters that can be measured and formally modeled.
Be a conceptual basis for understanding interconnectedness of time dimensions, solving the paradox of linearity and fragmentation of time that is the source of the crisis of meaning in modern life.
3.2 Postulate 2: Projection as a Productive Illusion