1.1.1 Dimensional framework
The framework consists of one three-dimensional time-space and one interwoven three-dimensional vector-space. Everything in the universe consists of momenta, and each momenta has positions in both the time-space and in the vector-space. Both positions are subject to interpretation depending on frame of reference.
The vector-space can be considered a pseudo-dimensional construction, if positions in vector-space can be fully described at the quantum level by properties within the time-space.
The only real representation of time within the dimensional framework is the view of space as a three-dimensional time filter. Space does not have an additional functionality of serving as a time filter. Spatial distance itself is defined as a time filter. It is an equivalence. If we change our perception of space, we change our perception of the time filter. If we move through the space of another frame of reference, we move through that frame's synchronized time. The MRM relies on the fact that the perception of space and the perception of time are completely interconnected. This is a strong argument for why time should not be defined as a separate dimension. A time dimension would define redundant information.
The view of space as a time filter is an important concept within the MRM. It is discussed further in section 2.1 The spatial delay.