Tuesday, 11 November 2025

Space-Time as a Fixed Stage

A Nature article (here) describes Feynman’s approach as embedding quantum events and histories within space-time. While this correctly situates quantum phenomena in a physical context, the narrative risks reviving a subtly classical assumption: that space-time is a passive stage upon which events merely occur.

From a relational perspective, space-time is not inert. Each event — from a particle transition to the expansion of the cosmos — is both located in and constitutive of space-time. The “fabric” is not a backdrop; it is an emergent pattern of relational potential that co-instantiates matter, energy, and geometry. Treating it as fixed obscures the fact that quantum gravity is not about events occurring in pre-existing coordinates, but about the mutual actualisation of events and the structure that hosts them.

Effect: Thinking of space-time as a stage encourages the illusion that quantum and gravitational phenomena are separable, and that they can be fully understood independently of their co-constitutive relational context.

Punchline: Space-time is not the scenery; it is the choreography itself, inseparable from the dance of events it hosts.

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