It is believed that matter, motion, gravity, and everything else we know of originated from the three dimensions of space and one of time. However, a new idea challenges this theory, suggesting that time, specifically in three dimensions, is the true fabric of the universe, with space emerging as a secondary effect..

This strange theory is proposed by Dr. Gunther Kletetschka, a physicist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. His research challenges one of the most deeply held ideas in modern physics: that space and time form the joint foundation of the universe.

Kletetschka suggests that time is not a single, forward-flowing line but a multidimensional framework with three independent directions. He claims that “viewing time as three-dimensional can naturally resolve multiple physics puzzles through a single coherent mathematical framework.

To understand Kletetschka’s proposal, imagine replacing the traditional spacetime framework with a six-dimensional setup: three axes for time and three for space. However, unlike conventional physics, this new theory treats time as the core structure. 

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