Gravity and time are among the most fundamental concepts in physics. Modern experiments have established that gravity affects the passage of time, causing clocks near massivebodies to run more slowly than clocks farther away. This phenomenon, known as gravitational time dilation, is routinely confirmed by precision measurements and incorporatedinto technologies such as the Global Positioning System (GPS).This essay explores a simple but provocative question: if gravity influences time, couldtime itself play a more fundamental role in what we perceive as gravity?Rather than presenting a technical theory, the discussion follows a conceptual pathaccessible to a broad audience. Beginning with the familiar relationship between distance,velocity, and time, it examines the parallel behavior of gravity and gravitational timedilation, the peculiar nature of free fall, the origin of weight, and the possibility thatthese phenomena may arise from a common geometric process.The purpose is not to challenge the empirical success of General Relativity, but toconsider whether gravity and time dilation might be interpreted as different observablemanifestations of a deeper temporal structure of spacetime.By focusing on questions rather than conclusions, this essay seeks to provide an intuitive bridge between everyday experience and a geometric interpretation of gravity.
Bernal J. Thalman (Sun,) studied this question.