Monday, 20 April 2026

Cuts and Invariance — 6 When temporal reading fails

Throughout this sequence, time has been displaced.

Not denied.
Not replaced.
But removed from its role as a primitive condition of description.

Yet it continues to return.

In familiar forms:

  • sequence,
  • duration,
  • propagation,
  • and experience.

These are not errors.

They are attempts:

to read relational structure as if it were ordered in time.

This post examines what happens when that reading can no longer be maintained.


1. What temporal reading requires

To interpret a structure temporally, certain conditions must hold.

There must be:

  • a stable ordering of instantiations,
  • a consistent relation of before and after,
  • a way to track variation across that ordering,
  • and a continuity that can be read as persistence.

Without these, temporal description cannot stabilise.

It is not that time is absent.

It is that:

the conditions required to construct time are not met.


2. Where temporal reading succeeds

In many cases, these conditions are satisfied.

Cuts align sufficiently to allow:

  • consistent ordering,
  • repeatable comparison,
  • and stable continuity.

In these regions, temporal interpretation is effective.

We can speak of:

  • processes,
  • change,
  • motion,
  • and duration.

Nothing in the present framework denies this.

It explains it.


3. Where temporal reading begins to strain

As constraint structures are pushed—through deformation, variation across cuts, or proximity to invariant limits—these conditions begin to fail.

  • ordering becomes unstable,
  • comparison loses coherence,
  • continuity fragments.

At this stage, temporal language does not disappear.

It becomes strained.

We say:

  • time dilates,
  • simultaneity breaks down,
  • processes behave unusually.

These are signals:

that temporal reading is no longer fully supported.


4. The limit of failure

At certain points, the strain becomes complete.

No stable ordering can be constructed.
No consistent sequence can be maintained.
No continuity can be interpreted as persistence.

At this point:

temporal reading fails altogether.

Not gradually.

Structurally.


5. The misdescription of “time stopping”

This failure is often described as:

time stopping,
time slowing to zero,
or time disappearing.

But these descriptions assume:

  • that time exists as a quantity,
  • and is then altered or removed.

This is not what occurs.

What occurs is:

the collapse of the conditions required to construct time as a description.

There is no time to slow.

No duration to eliminate.

Only:

a structure that no longer supports temporal interpretation.


6. The role of invariant limits

From the previous post, invariant limits define the boundaries of admissible structure.

At these limits:

  • constraint relations are maximally restrictive,
  • and permissible stabilisations are tightly constrained.

It is here that temporal reading most reliably fails.

Not because limits act on time,

but because:

they restrict the relational configurations needed to sustain temporal ordering.


7. Why the intuition persists

Despite this, the intuition remains powerful.

We continue to say:

  • “nothing happens,”
  • “no time passes,”
  • “the process is instantaneous.”

These are not meaningless.

They are compressed expressions of a structural fact:

the system resists being read temporally.

But the compression introduces error.

It turns:

  • failure of interpretation

into:

  • a property of the system.

8. What replaces temporal description

When temporal reading fails, nothing replaces it in the same form.

There is:

  • no alternative time,
  • no deeper temporal layer,
  • no hidden sequence.

What remains is:

relational structure under constraint.

Described in terms of:

  • dependence,
  • invariance,
  • and admissibility.

Not:

  • before and after.

9. What has been shown

Across the sequence, a consistent result has emerged:

  • time is not required to describe relational structure,
  • rates depend on temporal assumptions,
  • motion is an interpretation,
  • frames are derived stabilisations,
  • invariant limits define admissible structure,
  • and temporal reading is contingent on specific conditions.

When those conditions fail:

time does not change.

It ceases to be constructible.


10. End condition

We can now state the final position.

We are not describing:

  • a world in which time behaves strangely,
  • or a domain in which time disappears.

We are describing:

a structure that sometimes permits temporal interpretation—and sometimes refuses it completely.

That refusal is not exceptional.

It is structural.

And once recognised, it no longer requires explanation in temporal terms at all.

Cuts and Invariance — 5 Invariant limits and the structure of constraint

At this stage, a pattern has emerged.

Across different reconstructions:

  • frames have been removed,
  • motion has been displaced,
  • time has lost its role as a primitive,

and yet something remains fixed.

Not a quantity.
Not a trajectory.
Not a temporal relation.

But:

a limit that cannot be crossed without loss of coherence.


1. What an invariant limit is not

An invariant limit is often described as:

  • a maximum value,
  • a boundary in measurement,
  • or a constant that cannot be exceeded.

But this description depends on:

  • comparison across values,
  • measurement over intervals,
  • and variation within a parameter space.

All of which presuppose structures that have already been removed.

So an invariant limit cannot be:

a number at the edge of a scale.


2. The structural role of a limit

Instead, a limit must be understood as:

a condition on what kinds of relational structures can be stabilised at all.

It does not sit at the end of a process.

It defines:

the space within which processes can be coherently described.

So a limit is not something approached.

It is something already in force.


3. From invariance to limitation

Invariance was previously defined as:

the resistance of constraint relations to alteration across cuts.

But not all invariants are equal.

Some:

  • persist across variation,
  • but can still be reconfigured.

Others:

  • cannot be altered in any admissible cut,
  • and define the boundary of all possible stabilisations.

These are invariant limits.


4. The necessity of limits

Without such limits:

  • relational structures could be arbitrarily reconfigured,
  • coherence across cuts would not be enforceable,
  • and no stable description could be maintained.

So invariant limits are not optional features.

They are:

conditions of possibility for stability itself.


5. Why they appear as universal

In physical theory, certain constants appear universal.

They do not vary:

  • between systems,
  • between observers,
  • or under transformation.

Under the present reconstruction, this universality is not empirical coincidence.

It reflects:

the fact that these limits apply to the structure of constraint, not to particular instantiations.

So their invariance is not measured.

It is required.


6. The case of light revisited

The limit associated with light now takes its final form.

It is not:

  • a speed,
  • a property of photons,
  • or a feature of electromagnetic phenomena.

It is:

an invariant limit on how spatial differentiation can be stabilised across cuts.

This is why:

  • it cannot be exceeded,
  • it cannot be varied,
  • and it appears in all admissible descriptions.

7. Limits without approach

In conventional descriptions, limits are often:

  • approached asymptotically,
  • or reached under extreme conditions.

But here, this intuition fails.

An invariant limit is not:

  • something approached over time,

because:

  • there is no temporal progression,
  • no trajectory,
  • no accumulation toward a boundary.

Instead:

every admissible structure is already constrained by the limit.

So the limit is not an endpoint.

It is a precondition.


8. The disappearance of extremity

Because limits are no longer approached, the idea of “extreme conditions” changes.

What appears as:

  • high velocity,
  • large energy,
  • or limiting cases,

is actually:

a region in which constraint structure becomes more visibly dominant.

Nothing is becoming extreme.

Rather:

the structure is becoming less interpretable in familiar terms.


9. What this reveals about structure

At this point, the reconstruction yields a clear picture:

  • relational structures are not arbitrary,
  • their admissible forms are constrained,
  • and these constraints include limits that cannot be violated.

So the structure of constraint is not continuous and unbounded.

It is:

shaped by invariant limits that define what can and cannot be stabilised.


10. Transition

We are now left with a final question.

If invariant limits define what can be stabilised, then:

what happens at the limit itself?

Not in the sense of reaching it.

But in the sense of:

attempting to interpret it using the structures that the limit itself constrains.

This is where the last remnant of temporal intuition appears.

The claim that:

  • time behaves differently,
  • or disappears entirely,
  • at the limit.

The next post will examine that claim.

Not as a statement about extreme physics,

but as:

a diagnostic of where temporal reading fails altogether.

Cuts and Invariance — 4 Light as a constraint, not a motion

Light is usually introduced as the simplest possible case of motion.
  • it travels,
  • it propagates,
  • it moves from one place to another.

From this, a structure is built:

  • emission,
  • transmission,
  • absorption,
  • all ordered in time.

But none of these can be taken as primitive.

There is:

  • no traversal,
  • no temporal sequence,
  • and no background space through which anything moves.

So the question must be reformulated:

what remains of “light” once motion is removed?


1. The persistence of the intuition

Even after motion is set aside, something remains compelling.

Light:

  • connects distinct instantiations,
  • establishes relations across separation,
  • and appears as the fastest possible “thing.”

This persistence is not accidental.

It is tracking a real structural feature.

But it is misdescribed.


2. From propagation to constraint

Instead of asking:

how does light travel?

we ask:

what constraint must hold for these relations to be stabilised at all?

This shift removes:

  • paths,
  • trajectories,
  • and temporal progression.

What remains is:

a relation that must hold between spatial differentiations across cuts.


3. The appearance of distance

In the usual description, light:

  • covers distance over time.

But distance itself has already been reconstructed.

It is not:

  • a metric accumulated through traversal,

but:

a differentiation that must be jointly stabilised across cuts.

So what light “does” is not move across distance.

It marks:

the limit at which such differentiation can remain coherent.


4. The invariant limit

From the previous post, relativity introduced a constraint:

not all relational structures can be stabilised simultaneously across cuts.

Light now appears as the most precise expression of that constraint.

Not as an object.

But as:

the boundary condition that defines which relations are admissible at all.


5. Why it appears as a maximum speed

The familiar statement:

nothing can exceed the speed of light

is a translation.

What it expresses is:

beyond a certain constraint, relational structure cannot be made coherent.

The language of “exceeding a speed” presumes:

  • motion,
  • time,
  • and comparison across intervals.

None of these are required.

What is required is:

that certain constraint relations cannot be violated without collapse.


6. No signal, no transmission

At this point, two familiar ideas disappear:

  • no signal is sent,
  • no information travels.

These are interpretations layered onto:

the necessity that certain relations hold between instantiations.

So “communication” is not something that happens.

It is:

a condition that must be satisfied for coherence to exist.


7. Why light is singled out

If light is not moving, why does it occupy such a central role?

Because it is:

the clearest manifestation of a constraint that applies universally.

Other phenomena:

  • can vary,
  • can deform,
  • can be reinterpreted under different cuts.

But this constraint:

  • remains fixed,
  • cannot be altered,
  • and defines the limits of admissible structure.

So light appears fundamental because:

it reveals the boundary of what can be stabilised.


8. The disappearance of the photon

At this stage, the notion of a photon becomes secondary.

Not because it is incorrect.

But because it is:

a particular way of instantiating a constraint that does not depend on that instantiation.

So the photon is not:

  • a particle travelling,
  • or a wave propagating,

but:

a stabilised effect of a deeper constraint relation.


9. What remains

We are left with a minimal formulation:

  • there are cuts,
  • there are constraint relations between them,
  • some of these relations define absolute limits,
  • and these limits determine what can be stabilised at all.

What is called “light” is:

the manifestation of one such limit.


10. Transition

At this point, a final temptation remains.

Even if light is not moving, it is still often said:

that at this limit, time behaves differently—or disappears altogether.

This is the last place where temporal intuition attempts to survive.

The next post will examine that claim directly.

Not to reject it.

But to determine:

what structure gives rise to it, once motion and time are no longer available as primitives.

Cuts and Invariance — 3 Relativity without frames

Relativity is usually introduced through a simple idea:

  • different observers,
  • in different states of motion,
  • describe the same situation differently.

From this, a structure is built:

  • frames of reference,
  • transformations between them,
  • and invariants that remain unchanged.

But this formulation depends on assumptions that are no longer available.

There are:

  • no observers as primitive subjects,
  • no motion as traversal,
  • no time as an ordering parameter,
  • and no frames as pre-given structures.

So the question must be restated:

what remains of relativity when frames are removed?


1. What a frame was doing

A frame is usually taken to provide:

  • a coordinate system,
  • a stable perspective,
  • and a basis for measurement.

But more fundamentally, a frame does something else:

it stabilises a way of cutting relational structure such that comparisons become possible.

So what appears as:

  • “an observer’s perspective”

is, more precisely:

a particular stabilisation of constraint under a cut.


2. Removing the frame

If frames are removed as primitives, what remains are:

  • multiple cuts,
  • each producing a different instantiation,
  • each stabilising different aspects of the same constraint structure.

These cuts:

  • need not align,
  • need not produce identical orderings,
  • and need not support direct comparison.

So variation is not:

between observers

but:

between different stabilisations of constraint.


3. The real problem of relativity

Relativity is not fundamentally about motion.

It is about:

how different, non-identical cuts of the same constraint structure can still be mutually coherent.

This is a stricter requirement than it first appears.

Because once cuts diverge:

  • ordering may differ,
  • segmentation may differ,
  • and what counts as a “relation” may shift.

Yet coherence must be maintained.


4. Transformation reconsidered

In the usual formulation, transformation means:

  • converting coordinates from one frame to another.

But without frames, this becomes:

the requirement that different cuts remain compatible as instantiations of the same constraint structure.

So transformation is not:

  • a mapping of values,

but:

a consistency condition across distinct stabilisations.


5. Why motion appears

At this point, the familiar interpretation begins to reassert itself.

When two cuts differ systematically, we are tempted to say:

  • one is moving relative to the other,
  • time passes differently,
  • distances contract.

But these are interpretations.

What is actually present is:

structured incompatibility in how relations are stabilised.

Motion is introduced only when we:

  • impose traversal,
  • assume temporal order,
  • and read difference as change.

6. The loss of simultaneity

One of the central results of relativity is:

simultaneity is not absolute.

But this can now be restated more precisely.

Simultaneity depends on:

  • a stable ordering across instantiations.

When cuts differ, that ordering cannot be uniquely maintained.

So what fails is not:

  • “simultaneity in time,”

but:

the possibility of a single, globally stable ordering across all cuts.


7. What remains invariant

Despite this instability, something persists.

Not:

  • time intervals,
  • spatial distances,
  • or velocities,

but:

the constraint relations that survive across all admissible cuts.

These define:

  • what can be consistently stabilised,
  • what cannot be altered without contradiction,
  • and what structures are preserved under re-construal.

8. Relativity without motion

We can now state the central shift:

Relativity is not about:

  • objects moving through space over time,

but about:

the non-uniqueness of stable relational decomposition under constraint.

Different cuts produce:

  • different decompositions,
  • different orderings,
  • different apparent structures.

Relativity is the requirement that:

these differences do not destroy coherence.


9. The role of limits

Within this framework, limits become unavoidable.

There are constraint relations that:

  • cannot be exceeded,
  • cannot be reconfigured,
  • and must hold across all cuts.

These are not empirical accidents.

They are:

conditions of possibility for mutual coherence.

This is where the notion of an invariant limit—traditionally expressed as the speed of light—re-enters.


10. Transition

We are now in a position to understand why certain relations appear as absolute limits.

Not because something travels at a fixed rate.

But because:

beyond a certain point, relational structure cannot be stabilised consistently across cuts.

The next step is to examine that limit directly.

Not as motion.

Not as speed.

But as:

a constraint on how spatial differentiation itself can be maintained.

This is where light returns—not as a moving entity, but as the clearest expression of that constraint.

Cuts and Invariance — 2 When invariance is pushed to its limit

We now return to what physics calls relativity.

But we do not return to:

  • spacetime,
  • motion,
  • or observers in frames.

We return to a single question:

what happens to constraint relations when they are pushed to their limit of stable re-application?


1. Invariance under ordinary deformation

Previously, invariance was defined as:

the resistance of constraint relations to alteration across cuts.

Under mild variation:

  • different instantiations arise,
  • but relational structure remains stable,
  • and interpretive coherence is preserved.

This is the normal regime of stability.

Most descriptions of physics operate here.


2. The introduction of extreme deformation

Relativity enters when constraint structures are no longer merely varied, but systematically deformed.

Not in time.

Not in space.

But in:

the conditions under which relational comparisons can still be stabilised.

At this point, something important happens:

  • ordinary comparison begins to strain,
  • naive ordering becomes unstable,
  • and direct alignment between instantiations breaks down.

3. What “frame differences” actually are

A “frame” is usually taken to be:

  • a coordinate system,
  • an observer’s perspective,
  • or a reference structure.

But under the current reconstruction, a frame is more precisely:

a stabilised mode of cutting the same constraint structure such that certain relations become comparable.

So “different frames” are not different worlds.

They are:

different ways of stabilising cuts over the same underlying relational structure.


4. The real content of relativity

Relativity is not primarily about motion.

It is about:

the impossibility of constructing a single privileged cut that preserves all relational constraints simultaneously.

This produces:

  • differing decompositions of structure,
  • incompatible but internally stable orderings,
  • and systematic transformation rules between them.

But crucially:

these transformations are not movements through time or space.

They are:

consistency conditions between different stabilisations of constraint structure.


5. Why time seems to appear again

At this stage, something dangerous happens.

Because when two constraint-stabilised cuts differ, we are tempted to say:

  • “one is moving relative to the other,”
  • “time passes differently,”
  • “simultaneity is relative.”

But these are reinterpretations.

What is actually present is:

non-uniqueness of stable ordering under constraint deformation.

Time is reintroduced only when we insist on reading these differences as:

  • sequential,
  • dynamical,
  • or temporal.

6. The deeper invariance

What relativity actually preserves is not time, or distance, or velocity.

It preserves:

the consistency of constraint relations across all admissible cuts.

This is why transformation laws exist at all.

They are not describing motion between frames.

They are enforcing:

coherence between different structurally valid ways of cutting the same system.


7. What the speed of light becomes here

Within this picture, the invariant limit identified earlier reappears in a new form:

Not as a speed.

But as:

the boundary condition that determines which deformations of constraint structure are still jointly stabilisable.

So “c” is not a rate.

It is:

a structural limit on admissible relational deformation.


8. What relativity is not

To keep orientation clear:

Relativity is not:

  • the study of observers,
  • the behaviour of objects in motion,
  • or time dilation as a physical effect.

Those are downstream interpretations.

At this level, relativity is:

a theory of how constraint structures remain mutually coherent under incompatible stabilisations.


9. What has actually been gained

By removing time from the description, we do not lose relativity.

We gain something sharper:

  • no privileged frame,
  • no underlying temporal ordering,
  • no motion through background structure.

Instead:

a space of admissible constraint stabilisations, linked by invariance-preserving transformations.


10. Transition

We are now close to the point where physics usually reasserts its most intuitive picture:

light, photons, and null trajectories.

But at this stage, those concepts cannot be allowed to re-enter unchanged.

Because we now know:

even “propagation” is just one way of reading constraint structure under specific cuts.

So the next step is to confront the most subtle remaining temptation:

the idea that some entities (like photons) sit “outside time.”

Not as a claim to accept or reject—but as a final diagnostic of where temporal interpretation still tries to survive.

Cuts and Invariance — 1 What this series is doing (and not doing)

This post marks a shift in the project.

The preceding series, Rates without time, removed a set of assumptions that usually remain implicit: that time provides a primitive ordering, and that rates defined over it can function as basic descriptors. Those assumptions have now been displaced.

What follows does not continue that line of removal. It begins a second phase: an examination of what remains once those assumptions are no longer available, and how relational structure can still be stabilised under constraint.


1. What this project is not doing

At this point, it becomes easy to misidentify the aim.

This project is not:

  • an interpretation of quantum mechanics,
  • an alternative physical theory,
  • a metaphysical claim about what “really exists,”
  • or a denial of time as such.

It is also not an attempt to replace one foundational ontology with another.

Any reading that moves in this direction reintroduces exactly what has already been set aside:

a background world in which explanations are located.


2. What this project is doing

The task is more limited, and more exacting.

We are examining:

what must already be in place for familiar physical descriptions to be possible at all.

This includes:

  • temporal ordering,
  • measurement over intervals,
  • stability of comparison,
  • and the appearance of motion and change.

Rather than treating these as given, we treat them as:

stabilised outcomes of more basic relational constraints.


3. The minimal commitments

After the previous series, the framework has been reduced to a small set of elements that cannot be further removed without losing coherence:

  • cuts, which produce instantiations under constraint,
  • constraint relations, which limit what can be stabilised,
  • asymmetric dependencies, which introduce direction without traversal,
  • and invariance under re-application, which defines continuity.

Nothing in what follows will assume more than this.


4. From removal to reconstruction

Up to this point, the work has been subtractive.

  • time has been displaced as a primitive,
  • rates have been shown to depend on it,
  • and frames have been revealed as derived stabilisations.

But removal cannot continue indefinitely.

At a certain point, the question changes.

It is no longer:

what can be eliminated?

It becomes:

what remains stable once those eliminations have been made?


5. The problem of stability

Once time is no longer available as a background structure, a difficulty appears immediately.

Without temporal ordering:

  • comparison becomes unstable,
  • variation cannot be tracked as succession,
  • and continuity cannot be assumed as persistence.

Yet physical description still functions.

So something else must be doing the work.


6. Invariance as the new centre

What replaces temporal structure is not another parameter.

It is:

invariance—understood as the persistence of constraint relations across different cuts.

This is not invariance of values.

It is not the preservation of quantities under transformation.

It is:

the resistance of relational structure to alteration under re-construal.

This will become the central organising principle of what follows.


7. What counts as a “transformation”

Once time and frames are no longer primitive, transformation must also be redefined.

It cannot mean:

  • motion through space,
  • evolution over time,
  • or mapping between coordinate systems.

Instead, transformation is:

the shift from one cut to another, producing a different stabilisation of the same constraint structure.

The problem is not how things change.

It is:

how different stabilisations remain mutually coherent.


8. Why familiar concepts will reappear

At this stage, concepts from physics will begin to return:

  • invariance,
  • transformation,
  • relativity,
  • and eventually, the speed of light.

But they will not return unchanged.

Each will be treated as a test:

does it depend on time, rate, or frame in a way that cannot be reconstructed?

If it does, it will fail.

If it does not, it will be retained—but in a different form.


9. What understanding requires

To follow what comes next, only one shift is required.

Not agreement.
Not adoption of a new ontology.

Only this:

the ability to distinguish between a structure and the way it is read as temporal.

Once that distinction stabilises, the rest of the argument becomes trackable—even when it resists intuition.


10. Where this leads

We are now in a position to ask a more precise question than was previously available:

what kinds of relational structure remain stable under all admissible cuts?

And when such stability exists, it will not appear as:

  • a rate,
  • a trajectory,
  • or a process in time.

It will appear as:

a constraint on how relations can be stabilised at all.

This is where the next posts will begin:

not with motion,
not with time,
but with the limits of invariance itself.

Interlude — Watching Feynman on light, and the persistence of movement

They had gathered, not around the board this time, but around a small device which, for reasons never discussed, appeared capable of producing lectures on demand.

Mr Blottisham leaned forward with enthusiasm.

“Now this,” he said, “is a man who understands the problem.”

Professor Quillibrace said nothing.

Miss Stray watched.


A voice filled the room.

It spoke of light.

Of its peculiar behaviour.
Of its refusal to conform to ordinary expectations.
Of the strange fact that, in some sense, it does not experience time.

Blottisham nodded vigorously throughout.


“There,” he said, as the voice paused. “Exactly as I’ve been saying.”

“You have not been saying that,” said Quillibrace.

Blottisham waved this aside. “The important point is that light is different. It doesn’t behave like other things. It doesn’t really move in the usual sense.”

Quillibrace turned slightly.

“That is correct,” he said. “And incorrectly understood.”


Blottisham frowned. “How can it be both?”

“Because the statement preserves the intuition,” said Quillibrace, “while retaining the structure that makes the intuition necessary.”


Stray spoke.

“He can see something failing,” she said. “But he still describes it as if it were working.”


Blottisham looked between them.

“He says the speed of light isn’t like other speeds,” he insisted. “That it’s something fundamentally different.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace. “Because it is not a speed.”


Blottisham paused.

“Well then what is it?”

“A constraint,” said Quillibrace.


The device resumed.

Light was described as travelling.
As moving through space.
As taking no time—yet still connecting one place to another.


Blottisham seized on this.

“There!” he said. “It travels—but no time passes. That’s the paradox.”

“There is no paradox,” said Quillibrace. “Only a contradiction you are attempting to maintain.”


Blottisham stared. “It leaves one point and arrives at another.”

“No,” said Quillibrace.

“It must—otherwise how does it get there?”

“It does not get anywhere.”


Blottisham turned to Stray.

“You see the difficulty.”

“I see the construction,” she said.


Blottisham gestured toward the device.

“He’s describing a path. Emission, propagation, absorption.”

“He is describing it,” said Stray. “Yes.”

“And you deny it?”

“I deny that the description corresponds to structure.”


Quillibrace spoke again.

“What is preserved,” he said, “is a relation between instantiations under constraint.”

Blottisham shook his head. “That’s not what he’s saying.”

“No,” said Quillibrace. “It is what makes what he is saying appear necessary.”


The voice continued, now speaking of frames of reference.

Of observers in motion.
Of clocks behaving differently.


Blottisham smiled. “Now we’re on solid ground.”

“No,” said Quillibrace.


Blottisham sighed. “You’re going to remove observers as well, I suppose.”

“They were never added,” said Quillibrace.


Stray tilted her head.

“He needs them,” she said. “To hold the structure together.”

“But the structure does not require them,” said Quillibrace.


Blottisham leaned back.

“So let me understand this,” he said. “Light doesn’t move, time doesn’t pass, there are no frames, no observers—and yet something is still being described.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace.

“And what is that?”


Quillibrace did not answer immediately.


Stray did.

“A limit,” she said. “On how the structure can be stabilised.”


Blottisham was quiet for a moment.

Then:

“And the statement that a photon experiences no time?”


Quillibrace allowed the faintest trace of approval.

“A compression,” he said. “Of a failure.”


Blottisham blinked. “A failure of what?”


Stray answered.

“A failure to construct time,” she said. “Under those constraints.”


Blottisham considered this.

“So time doesn’t stop,” he said slowly.

“No,” said Quillibrace.

“It just isn’t there.”


Quillibrace inclined his head slightly.


Blottisham looked back at the device.

“And he knows this?”


A pause.


Stray spoke carefully.

“He knows something is wrong with the usual picture,” she said. “He can feel where it breaks.”

“But he still describes it as if it were intact,” said Quillibrace.


Blottisham nodded slowly.

“So he’s right,” he said, “but not quite.”


Quillibrace turned back toward the empty board.

“He is precise,” he said, “within a structure that cannot sustain his precision.”


Blottisham frowned.

“That seems unfair.”


Stray smiled, just slightly.

“It’s inevitable,” she said.


The device fell silent.


Blottisham remained seated for a while.

Then, with some reluctance:

“So light doesn’t travel,” he said.

“No.”

“It doesn’t experience time.”

“No.”

“It doesn’t go from one place to another.”

“No.”


Blottisham looked up.

“Then why does it look so very much as if it does?”


This time, neither answered immediately.


At last, Quillibrace spoke.

“Because,” he said, “you insist on reading it that way.”


Stray added, almost gently:

“And because the structure allows you to.”