Light

Light has no time. It doesn’t travel “through” anything. When you turn on a flashlight, from the light’s perspective, there is no moment in which it is “in transit.” One page of the flip-book shows no light. The next page shows light striking the wall. There is no in-between — because light never experiences one.

“Speed” is a term used by things that take time.
Light does not.

This is why the speed of light is constant. Not because it must “move through space,” but because it is already at every location it will be — within each frame of reality.

The flip-book analogy explains this cleanly: time does not pass for light. It is not that light is fast — it’s that light never begins or ends in the traditional sense. It is the page itself being redrawn.

Even relativity agrees: as an object approaches light speed, time slows. For light, time halts. And if time halts, there is no duration between two points. Only a change in location from frame to frame.

The Resonance Theory doesn’t reframe this. It reveals it: light’s behavior was always the consequence of emergence + collapse between probable predictions. What appears to be “motion” is actually the accumulation of resolved predictions being remembered by resonance.