Same rate? :) Depends on what else is frozen.
If you can master being a concert violinist, the violin will play, right? Strings will vibrate, friction on you hand will cause blisters, your muscles will be strained, i.e. you deteriorate. You would age then, right?(Physics) I think you would age at the same rate.
However, pathogenic(harmful) microbes and stuff will be frozen, too..you won't be attacked by diseases while time is frozen. So even if you're a hundred years old and your immune system is whacked, you won't get sick! Then again, will you be able to function without the "helpful" microbes? =/
If even the sun's rays are frozen, and by moving, you cast shadows(blocking the rays), and upon moving again, the rays are still frozen(blocked by where you were), wouldn't you use up a LOT of light? and it would be too dark to practice your violin in! :D *rambles*
Confusing.. :(
2007-04-13 09:44:15
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answer #1
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answered by pulang_santa 2
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It would deteriorate at the same rate, you are freezing time around you, but not yourself, thus skin cells would still flake off as you played the violin, you would still age normally, age is how old the human body is, although usually associated with time it can be without, think of things in terms of effort, lets say the heart can only beat 20 million times in a life before it gets weaker, you spend 20 years practicing violin, not that stressful, if you returned to normal time though your heart would have beat 5 million times, (this is equivalent to roughly a 100 year life span) your heart pumped as much blood as it would have in normal time. -note this is merly an example, i have no idea how much the heart beats per lifetime
It also depends what you are affecting, if you chose to make time slow but you stay the same then the same thing would happen, yet if you sped time up for you alone then your heart would beat twice as fast (if you were to double your movements)
hope i made sense :)
2007-04-13 09:23:06
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I am probably way off. However, it seems to me that time is connected to entropy and the random speed of molecules -- plus the fact that we never can return every random movement to of all such molecules to their original state / place.
SO, when we freeze things down in a freezer or commercial deep-freezer aren't we somewhat 'freezing time ' for the components that are frozen? Isn't that the reason they don't spoil -- because time in effect has been put on slo-mo?
2007-04-14 00:05:01
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answer #3
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answered by Fuzzy 7
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Id say that you would still age, unless the power which allowed you to freeze time also included the ability to not age. Age is considered a disease that is currently under development to resolve.
2007-04-13 12:55:39
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answer #4
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answered by Wolf1134 2
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Your body would surely not decay at all because if time was frozen things would stop occurring.
2007-04-13 09:20:48
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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if time was frozen then you would be frozen too. also you wouldnt deteriorate its impossible to ag or change physicaly if time is stopped
2007-04-13 09:18:26
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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If you froze time, you too would be frozen. It is an impossible situation to theorize. Sorry, I can't help you more.
2007-04-13 09:16:35
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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You would learn the violin, but not age a single second.
2007-04-13 09:20:44
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answer #8
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answered by puma 6
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power to freeze? how would you thaw? would it be moist and messy?
2007-04-13 09:50:14
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answer #9
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answered by ·will¹ªm ºn vacation! 5
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