(12-24-2019, 06:25 PM)Aion Wrote:What is the void?Quote:At 20 °C (68 °F), the speed of sound in air is about 343 metres per secondQuote:The speed of light in a vacuum is 186,282 miles per second
If you've ever seen a thunder storm, that's why you see the flash first and the rumble follows behind. You can actually judge the distance of a storm based on the timing difference between the flash and the thunder.
Light is the fundamental manifesting vibration, sound is a manifestation of that light on particular levels. What we think of as sound are actually propagating pressure waves produced by energy fluctuations across the matrix of matter. When we hear something it's because those vibrations are being translated by our brains as that type of signal. Normally our eardrums pick up oscillations in the air but can also pick things up direct via induction. People with synesthesia for example may have these signals translated differently in their brains and they may 'see' sounds.
This is simply pointing to the truth that all of our senses are merely translations of vibratory signals condensed in to a perceivable reality by consciousness. In truth, there is nothing 'solid' there but simply an endless sea of signals.
Is it everywhere and nowhere?
Where is light?
If light has a constant, it is finite in speed.
Does sound in a vacuum, have a speed?
It precedes light, perhaps it is a question of our perception of speed?