Journal of Theoretics Vol.3-2

April/May  2001  Comments



Time is not so Simple

Dear Dr. Siepmann, 

You are the first man I know, who understands, that the time is nothing. For explanation of it I even have made the [following] animated GIF:



It is very difficult to explain to a man, that if he is moving with the speed of 60 km p h, he is moving with the speed of 4 km p degree. The people have got used to give the time any physical value, and it is only a fraction, a ratio of two periods. The present time for a man lasts until any noticeable modifications will happen. For a nature it can be formalized as a modification of an energy. Thus the present time very thinly, as it is visible from [the figure below]:

This is one from basic concepts, which are applied in my theory of gravitation and integrated theory of electrodynamics and gravidynamics. At a conclusion of these theories I have left aside inertial frames of reference. You can be acquainted with outcomes on site http://m-telegin.euro.ru/Pagen.htm (inactive/moved 8/2001). 

Sincerely Yours, 
M. Telegin <mtelegin@comail.ru>

Reply from Dr. Siepmann:
Thank you very much for your email. It is truly a rare person that understands the complexity and nuances of Time. I have finished a rough draft of a book on time and hope to publish it later this year. I look forward to reading your paper. 
[We hope to publish some relative experts from M. Telegin's paper in the future.]


STEVENSILVERDRAG@aol.com wrote:
Are you a respect journal in the world of science?

Reply from the Editor:
We think so. We have thousands of scientists who subscribe to the journal, we are cited by some citation services and being evaluated by others (it is difficult though since we are a broad scientific journal rather than a specialized journal that these services like), and we are making a difference. Yes we publish those articles which the first tier journals may reject for format reasons but all of the articles have a scientific and logical basis. We do not publish "quack or nonscientific material" and we reject more articles than we publish. So yes. 
  
Dr. Siepmann, Editor 
Journal of Theoretics

 

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