Absolute Time: Definition and ontological characteristics.
Relative Time: Projection modalities and temporal experience.
Time Resonance: The concept of synchronization of meaning between consciousness and absolute time.
3. Five Theoretical Postulates
Postulate 1: Absolute Time Ontology.
Postulate 2: Projection as a Productive Illusion.
Postulate 3: Consciousness as the Universal Clock.
Postulate 4: Fragmentation as a Crisis of Meaning.
Postulate 5: Recovery through Multidimensional Integration.
4. Theoretical and Contextual Basis
Comparison with Newtonian, Relativistic, and Quantum theories of time.
The study of time in philosophy: Bergson, Husserl, Heidegger.
The role of time in cosmology and neurocognition.
5. Formal Approach and Conceptual Model
Early mathematical model: Absolute time astreferential in the relative time manifold {t, t, ..., t}. Resonance as a harmonic function of awareness oft:
 R(tr,)=cos((trt0)())R(t, \psi) = \cos(\omega(t - t)\cdot \phi(\psi))
Schematic simulation of a time-aware system.
Relation to complex systems theory and information fields.
6. Empirical and Existential Implications
Fragmentation of time in modern society.
The climate crisis, human burnout, and the speed of the economic system.
The spiritual and psycho-social relevance of absolute time.
7. Multi-Dimensional Integration as a Way Home
Science and spirituality as a bridge of resonance.
The role of art, poetry, and ritual in time synchronization.
A social system based on ecological rhythms and temporal awareness.