{"authors":[],"components":[{"id":"root","name":"root","payload":{"cid":"bafybeibmsp2bwm45mtu6uag62tz5pmcee2xasrq4t5o3ww4id3zodeoqcu","path":"root"},"type":"data-bucket"}],"defaultLicense":"CC BY","description":"Rooted in the Wagaku Philosophical System, the Shuiquan Theory of Time constructs a cognitive framework integrating spiritual core and scientific rigor, with \"symbiotic opposition and ultimate unity\" as its core logic. Its essence lies in the Zero State Field (ZSF), and the cyclic symbiosis of the field's \"manifest state (1) - latent state (-1)\" constitutes the essence of time—there is no \"absolute time\" independent of the ZSF field. The theory realizes quantitative description through multidimensional coupling equations among the ZSF field, time, consciousness (consciousness integration degree Φ), spatial curvature, and computational load, resolving core issues such as the time conflict between relativity and quantum mechanics, and the heat death paradox, while integrating the wisdom of Eastern and Western philosophy. Through eight core modules including individual model construction, parameter sensitivity scanning, long-term steady-state (RK4/odeint) validation, networked ternary unit simulation, and Monte Carlo measurability assessment, the numerical simulation and 3D/4D visualization results are consistent with theoretical predictions (with an error margin of 3-5%), and have been verified through experimental paths such as atomic clocks, EEG/fMRI, and cold atom interference. The core conclusion is: Time is the dynamic rhythm of the ZSF field's \"manifestation-latency-consciousness-computation\" symbiosis, without absolute start or end. Its irreversibility and periodicity originate from the evolution of the ZSF field, and human subjective time is the brain's mapping of ZSF information flow. Civilization must follow the temporal rhythm of the ZSF field to achieve dynamic balance.","keywords":["Physics","Cosmology","Interdisciplinary Science","","Quantum mechanics","Relativity","Integration of Eastern and Western philosophy","Cognitive psychology"],"researchFields":["time"],"title":"Shuiquan Theory of Time: Theory of the Essence of Time","version":"desci-nodes-0.2.0"}