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absolute space

American  

noun

Physics.
  1. space that is not affected by what occupies it or occurs within it and that provides a standard for distinguishing inertial systems from other frames of reference.


Etymology

Origin of absolute space

First recorded in 1885–90

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

However, these models hinged on access to privileged information about absolute space at all times -- information that the animal does not have.

From Science Daily • Oct. 30, 2023

“We had to adjust some notions of what we thought was absolute. There was absolute space and time for Newton,” Venkatesh says.

From Scientific American • May 22, 2023

Locality is an aspect of an even more compelling illusion: that we exist within an absolute space, with respect to which we mark our positions as we move “through” it.

From Scientific American • Apr. 4, 2019

Kant thought that we lived in a world of absolute space and time, that universal causality prevailed, that this was not just an interesting fact about the world but a precondition for thinking about it.

From Scientific American • Apr. 27, 2012

In fact, he refused to accept lack of absolute space, even though it was implied by his laws.

From "A Brief History of Time: And Other Essays" by Stephen Hawking