• KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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    8 days ago

    This is actually an interesting question. How is age handled in a space-age civilization? Someone born on one planet could be 10 while on a different planet they’d be 50 in the same timeframe. What if you spend part of your life on one and the rest on another? It’d be inconvenient to use one planet’s ‘day’ as the standard, as they’d all be different lengths…

    • Dasus@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Just how is time handled.

      We just need yo hand waive things like time being relative.

      There’s no universal clock keeping time.

      Think Interstellar, but that it would apply to an entire galaxy since people move at different speeds and live in different places and time runs differently.

    • Sertou@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      In Star Wars, a Galactic Standard Year corresponded to the time it took Coruscant to orbit it’s star once, 368 standard days.

    • anton
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      8 days ago

      Use a unit of time based on universal constants, like seconds, an earth year is roughly 31.5Ms.

    • Stamets@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 days ago

      You could pick a neutral thing and then denote that as the galactic ‘clock’. We do it as humans to an extent. We use Pulsars to measure distance and time because of the extremely precise rotation times.