Oops, my work is not done. "How" is a short question that takes a long explanation...
octelcogopod said:
how do we measure the time it takes for something to get done?
Measuring something is done in two steps. First, select some arbitrary unit that exhibits the same property as what you want to measure. Second, see how many times your unit fits in what you want to measure.
Selecting a unit is a trial and error exercise. What seems suitable at some point can later turn out to lack accuracy. You wouldn't use a rubber band as a unit of length for obvious reasons, a metal ruler is much more consistent. It is still subject to temperature changes, so a wooden ruler may be better. But humidity affects it. The reliability problem arises no matter what unit we pick. Even the kilogram is reported to have lost weight.
Recognizing that nothing is perfect, we fall back on what is most useable, something apparently regular and that does not vary wildly under different conditions of use. In the case of change, a pendulum appears regular under many conditions compared to other changes so clocks were build around it. Atomic clocks use a much more reliable change but even these cannot be considered perfect, just the best we can manufacture.
The second step, taking a measurement, is done by matching what we want to measure against our unit. In the case of length, we would place a ruler as close as possible to the item we want to measure and observe how it fits against it. The device we use as a unit does not measure anything other than itself so it is up to the observer to apply sufficient skill to obtain an accurate match and measurement. In the case of change, we place our clock in the same frame of reference as the event we want to measure and see how it fits against it. If the clock ticks 30 times between the start and end of a race then we have measured the amount of change (aka time) of the race to be 30 clock ticks. If the clock also ticks 30 times between the start and the end of a television commercial then this is also the amount of change that corresponds to this other, separate event. The race involved a change in position whereas the commercial involved a change of images, but both exhibited the common property of change and both could be measured using the same unit.
What makes it so that it appears that while all things move and change faster and slower, they all appear to happen in the same *time span*
I am sorry, I am not clear on what you are asking. The fact that you put *time span* in asterisks gives me a hint that you may not be entirely clear on it either. When this happens, it is sometimes useful to think in terms of length instead of change and reword:
"What makes it so that it appears that while all things are longer or shorter, they all appear to exist in the same *space span*"
...hummm... it didn't help this time.
does this mean that all change is in essence unrelated to each other?
I don't see this as a conclusion. All things are related. A change in some aspect of reality causes another.
There are a lot of things that change in the universe, but it all appears coherent, is that our consciousness or maybe because all things are made up of the same primordial entity?
I think we just interpret it as cause-and-effect relations. It's how our consciousness makes sense of whatever reality is made of. As in "everything is matter and energy" and it all works together. If it didn't then could not make sense of it.
It always take the same amount of time to do something, relative to everything else, or so it appears anyway, which makes me wonder why it's all so rigid in a way.
If things were not consistent then we would never know what will happen next. If there are laws of nature then there must be consistency.