Time as Emergent from Dependency presents a bold rethinking of one of the most fundamental assumptions in science and philosophy: the nature of time. Instead of treating time as a primary dimension in which reality unfolds, this work argues that time is not fundamental-it is emergent.
The central thesis is simple:
Time does not carry existence.
Time emerges from it.
At the foundation of this framework lies dependency (Dep)-a structural relation in which one element exists only if another is ontologically prior. From this principle, reality is reconstructed not as a temporal sequence, but as a relational structure.
To formalize this, the book introduces a unified system:
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Philosophy