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Four essential dimensions
In Kantian philosophy, time is defined as a substrate that remains while everything else changes, as well as being one of the a priori intuitions, of which externally space and internally time. With this, it is intended to say that all experience in the world is perceived by our senses, from the exterior to our understanding which synthesizes to arrive at the definition of concepts and, furthermore, is internally cataloged, not in a period of time, since this is imminent and never changes, but in a period of internal change, since our physical body is constantly changing, which is compared against that immutable intuition thus creating an interval, which is a set of moments that metaphysically make an event possible.

When we talk about something physical, undoubtedly, after perceiving the external world with our senses, we are talking about a world projected in three spatial dimensions, which is understood in a fourth dimension, time, and in this immutable dimension only our understanding changes because within the continuous mutability, we can find an interval between the moment we begin to perceive or take note of what is perceived and the moment when that perception is processed by our understanding to create knowledge. With this, we have four essential dimensions that make up reality and existence as such, of which three are united to integrate space as it is: a three-dimensional space. And the remaining one is immutable and intuited as time.

There are two fundamental locutions, in which I would like to inquire because it is necessary to know about these maxims to continue advancing in this essay, within which the predicate, having only the subject as a difference, is similar and curiously among these subjects, everything that exists is covered. The first of these is fundamental within the natural sciences and was elaborated between Mikhail Lomonosov and Antoine Lavoisier, known as the law of conservation of matter, which within its many interpretations says: matter is neither created nor destroyed, it only transforms. The second one is known as the first principle of thermodynamics or the law of conservation of energy and is very similar to the previous one except that in this case…