
07/25/2025
I think about this way too often. This is my theory on my ability to accurately read tarot. I’m simply just looking and tapping into the most likely outcome based on the available options.
A physicist has proposed a mind-bending new idea: what if time, not space, is the true foundation of our universe—and not just one direction of time, but three? According to Gunther Kletetschka from the University of Alaska Fairbanks, time may have three dimensions, while space could simply be a byproduct. Instead of the classic four-dimensional spacetime we’ve long accepted, this theory envisions reality built on a six-dimensional fabric: three time dimensions and three space dimensions.
Think of it like a painting: traditional physics says space is the canvas and time flows across it. Kletetschka flips that—time is the canvas, and space is just the paint. His work builds on previous theories that explored three-dimensional time but were mostly theoretical. His version, however, claims to make real-world predictions, including accurately calculating the masses of known particles like electrons and quarks.
Three-dimensional time means there could be other “directions” of time—like stepping sideways into a different outcome of the same day, rather than just moving forward. But don’t worry: Kletetschka’s model still respects cause and effect. He believes this idea could even help scientists finally unify quantum mechanics and gravity into a long-sought “theory of everything.”
While intriguing, it’s worth noting that this theory hasn’t yet been widely accepted. It was published in a lower-profile journal and hasn’t undergone rigorous peer validation. But if it holds up, it could completely reshape how we think about the universe—and ourselves.
Three-Dimensional Time: A Mathematical Framework for Fundamental Physics
Reports in Advances of Physical Sciences 2025 09
10.1142/S2424942425500045