3.5.4 Theoretical Basis and Supporting Studies
Theory Integral Ken Wilber
The integral approach emphasizes the importance of integrating the physical, mental, spiritual, and social dimensions as a path to comprehensive understanding.
Complex Systems and Adaptive Dynamics
The study of adaptive systems highlights the need for integration of various subsystems to create stability and harmonious evolution in the context of time.
Interdisciplinary Experiments and Case Studies
Several contemporary initiatives in ecology, education, and the arts demonstrate the great potential of multidimensional integration to build a collective consciousness in tune with absolute time.
This postulate concludes the theoretical framework by emphasizing the urgency of restoring the resonance of time through a holistic and inclusive approach, as the key to facing the existential and ecological challenges of the modern era.
4. Theoretical and Contextual Basis
4.a Comparison with Newtonian, Relativistic, and Quantum Theories of Time
To place Absolute Time Resonance TheoryIn the context of modern science, it is important to make a comparison with the three dominant paradigms of time in physics and the philosophy of science:Newtonian time, Relativistic time, and Quantum time.
4.a.1 Newtonian Time: Absolute and Linear Time
Basic Concepts
In Newton's framework, time is considered an absolute, universal, and homogeneous entity that flows linearly and uniformly, regardless of events or observers. Time is a static background independent of space and matter.
Relation to the Postulate of Absolute Time Ontology
The first postulate in this theory is conceptually in line with Newton's idea of absolute time as an ontological reference. However, the Absolute Time Resonance Theory extends it by adding the dimensions of consciousness and resonance as a link between absolute time and temporal experience.