How to measure Time?
Time appears to be a crucial element in many types of measurements. Time is a component of speed, force and pressure. Gravity, electricty, light, radiation and other waves are all phenomena taking place over time. Just like the metre is derived from radiation, the second is defined as the time of 9,192,631,770 periods of the electro-magnetic radiation corresponding to a transition in the Cesium-133 atom. Such measurements may remain relatively stable over time, but they are not absolutely constant and they are alien to people. As measuring time in this way is incomprehensible to common people, the Government can get away with dictating us what time it is. Time is an important standard, it can virtually rule our lives. Aware of the power of the concept of time, the Government organizes public transport and regulates shops trading hours, school attendance, holidays and working hours around a rigid enforcement of a standard for time. The problem with any standard of measurement is that ti