This work introduces the Time-Gel (Time-Cel) Model, a conceptual framework proposing that time is not a linear dimension but a density-based dynamic field structure. The model argues that temporal flow emerges from variations in informational and energetic concentration rather than from classical spacetime continuity. By integrating philosophical reasoning with systems-based structural analysis, the theory suggests that reality behaves as a viscosity-modulated field, where perception, probability clustering, and event formation are influenced by density gradients. In this framework, acceleration, collapse, and stagnation correspond to localized temporal viscosity shifts. The Time-Gel Model does not reject established physics; instead, it proposes a structural reinterpretation of temporal behavior as a layered field phenomenon. This perspective opens interdisciplinary dialogue between physics, cognitive science, probability theory, and metaphysical inquiry. The model is presented as a theoretical foundation for future analytical and empirical exploration.
Erkan Bayar (Sun,) studied this question.