OKXar wrote:Imagine a sheet of blank paper and consider that the map of the Land. Then place a stack of transparent sheets on it - each of them is a moment in Time.
Place a dot with a marker on the same place on each transparent sheet; from above, you only see a dot, but if you look at it from the side, the various dots form a three-dimensional object which spans the whole stack of sheets. That is a caesure.
Huh? First the caesure was at position A in every moment in time, now it was never at position A, it was always at position B. I don't think that works.Xar wrote:Now move the caesure around by moving the whole stack of transparent sheets around the map of the Land. There - a caesure which roams the Land, joining together all moments in Time...
When Linden arrives at Kevin's Watch the caesure is not there. As she (and we) observe, it travels toward her like a regular old twister. So, in one sense it moves through time and space just like everything else. Resolving that with "a Fall stirs together every moment which has ever existed in the place it happens to occupy as it moves around." is the tough part.
So, when Anele fell into a caesure and moved from his own time into Lind's (approximately), how long was the string? I'm sure Anele considered his own time "right now".Jerico wrote:time works this way. It's like a string that grows. The start of the string well call point A, this is the begining of all things when the arch was first created. The string grows longer as time grows forward. You can't move to future that hasn't happened yet because the sting is still growing and the longest point on the string is right now this very second.