120- Human-Made Time
So, now that we are in this situation, should we announce that the term "time" is meaningless and useless, and it should not exist?
No, we should not. We see that humankind needs "time," and the very fact that this term was invented in the first place demonstrates such a necessity. How can we solve this problem?
To resolve this problem, we have no other choice but to say that the term "time" is relative and human-made to resolve human needs. It is created by humankind, and it is not stable or fixed. When humankind names their babies, it is human-made and is for identification, not an absolute thing or real. It is for mutual understanding and comprehension of a conversation. This notion can also be said about "time." It is relative and human-made so that humankind could fulfill their needs.
Einstein's theory defines a "specified" time: a fixed and stationary time in space. However, this time would be that same notion of space unless our conscience revives it via bestowing time.
Challaye
The campaigns held by scholars against Einstein's relative time and objections that some (including Bergson) had against this theory resulted in considering the relative time merely as a physical (unfixed) time that two objects have with one another. On the other hand, the philosophic and psychologic time (or supernatural "time" for that matter) is a "time" measured using an absolute length, which is the duration of the universe. Many books have been written regarding this issue.
The highest conceivable number is one with no physical feasibility; it resulted from multiplying nine by 9 for 489,420,387 times.
If we are to write this number down in conventional fashions, it will need 1600 kilometers long paper, and it will take one week to read. Of course, no one has ever seen this number, but we know that its last digits are 89, and its first digits are 773,124,428. This number is more than the total number of snowflakes ever snowed on the earth, and it is four million times more than the number of electrons existing in the universe. At the same time, scholars speculate that the number of electrons is an 80-figure number.
From the magazine “Coronet”