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An interesting affect, that appears to show the equivalence of time and distance, is found in photography. This is called motion blur. Motion blur is when the shutter speed of the camera is slower than the action speed. Since time is stopped in the final photo, and the speed difference is conserved; appears as the motion blur, time appears as uncertainty in distant. The motion blur or uncertainty in distance gives the brain the impression of motion, even with time stopped in the photo. Heisenberg Uncertainty may be an example of more general affect based on the conversion of time potential to distance potential. This is not an artifact of measuring. In the photo below, if we look at the cycler we can see his position, but we can't tell his momentum, because he looks stationary. The scenery, on the other hand, appears to have momentum, but the motion blur make it hard to tell an exact position. Since time is not considered a physical thing of tangible substance, when space-time contracts or expands only the imagination is moving. Since motion blur can trigger the imagination to give us the feeling of movement, with time=stopped, these two imaginary things are connected. In fact, motion blur suggests that space can stem from time; conservation.
You clearly have no idea what you are talking about. Life is actually a lot simpler than you want it to be. I'll leave you to wallow in selfinduced complexity.