There is one fatal flaw in Orefas thesis, and that is the fact that nothing would be able to change without time.
Time isn't just equal to change, because obviously without any sort of system to guide HOW something move in space, would would it move?
It seems also that everything moves at the same "speed" relative to each other.
While the speed we measure is relative to our earth, on Earth itself, the speed of the objects never change.
80 MPH will always be 80MP, relative to earth.
When we experience time going forward, in our consciousness, then time is always going at the same pace.
If we throw a ball, then we expect that ball to have a certain speed, and certainly, it will always have that speed we predict.
if time increased its pace, the ball would go faster.
If then time is just a property of the interaction of the most basic building blocks of the universe, then time can be said to be emergent of those rules.
But the question remains, is time an emergent property of the laws of physics, or is it a dimension of sorts, that is intertwined in the matter, but independent of the matter itself.
If wee were to look at everything in the universe as one thing, then time could very well be another emergent property of mass.
I guess time will tell.