Submitted:
06 August 2025
Posted:
07 August 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
I. Introduction
A. Focus and Orientation
B. Process and Events
The ultimate facts of nature, in terms of which all physical and biological explanation must be expressed, are events connected by their spatio-temporal relations, and that these relations are in the main reducible to the property of events that they can contain (or extend over) other events which are parts of them. In philosophy, events are more ultimate than space and time, constituting them as interconnected […]The ultimate facts of nature, in terms of which all physical and biological explanation must be expressed, are events connected by their spatiotemporal relations, and that these relations are in the main reducible to the property of events that they can contain (or extend over) other events which are parts of them. [6]
C. Aim
D. Sections
II. TM Modeling
A. The TM World
B. The Generic Actions
C. The Thimac
D. The Thimac as a Thing and as Machine
E. Thimac as a Region and as an Event
F. The Action: Create
G. Actions
- 1)
- Arrive: A thing arrives at a thimac.
- 2)
- Accept : A thing enters a thimac. For simplification, the arriving things are assumed to be accepted (see Figure 1); therefore, arrive and accept actions are combined into the receive action.
- 3)
- Release : A thing is ready for transfer outside the thimac.
- 4)
- Process : A thing is changed, handled, and examined, but no new thimac is generated.
- 5)
- Transfer : A thing crosses a thimac’s boundary as an input or output.
- 6)
- Create : Creation here refers to producing a thing that is new to the world (of the model); therefore, a new thimac is registered as an ontological unit. It indicates the birth or coming-into-thimac (i.e., must make it out of other thimacs). At the static level, create is a logical possibility of realization at the dynamic level.
III. Example
A. Static TM Model
- The circle (instead of a rectangular for further illustrative purpose) in the middle represents You (number 1 in the figure) receiving the Boarding pass (2).
- Accordingly, You (with your Boarding pass) move (3) to the thimac called Bags check in.
- In the Bags check in thimac, You are processed (4) by providing your Boarding pass (5). Note, Creating your Boarding pass means the appearance of the Boarding pass in this thimac for the first time as a separate entity.
- The Boarding pass is returned (6) to You, and You leave the Bags check in thimac to the Immigration thimac (7).
- In the Immigration thimac, You are processed (8) by surrendering your Boarding pass (9) to be processed (10) and given back to You (11). Accordingly, You move to Security (12).
- In Security (13), You are processed as before in order to move to the thimac of Boarding the aircraft (14).
B. Dynamic Model
IV. Processes as Events
A. Anti-Thesis: Aristotle’s Change
B. States Are Also TM Events
V. Applications of TM Change
A. Zeno’s Paradoxes: TM View
B. Relativistic Time: TM View
VI. Business Process
- -
- A logical organization of people, materials, energy, equipment, and procedures in an organization’s activities, designed to achieve a specific end result.
- -
- An organized, measurable set of activities aimed at producing a specific output.
- -
- A series of actions or operations conducing to an end.
- -
- A sequence of repeatable activities executed within an organization.
- -
- Activities that represent the steps required to achieve an objective.
- -
- A dynamic ordering of work activities across time and place, with a beginning, an end, and clearly identified inputs and outputs.
- -
- Developing a new product
- -
- Ordering goods from a supplier
- -
- Creating a marketing plan
- -
- Processing and paying an insurance claim
- -
- Writing a proposal for a government contract
A. Process in BPMN: Example I
TM Modeling
B. Process in BPMN: Example II
TM Static Model
- -
- A complaint is received (1).
- -
- The complaint is registered (2).
- -
- A questionnaire is sent to the complainant (3), and a deadline for a response is set to two weeks (4).
- -
- The complaint is processed (5) to generate an evaluation (6).
- -
- The complainant responds to the questionnaire (7) within the deadline; hence, it is forwarded to be actually processed (8) along with the complaint (9) and evaluation (10).
- -
- The deadline for a response has passed; hence, the questionnaire is discarded (11).
- -
- The result of the actual processing of the complaint is checked (12).
- -
- If the check result is not okay (13), the complaint requires reprocessing. Otherwise, if the check result is okay (14) and the questionnaire has been archived, a notice will be sent to inform the complainant (15) about the completion of the complaint handling.
TM Dynamic Model
- -
- E1: A complaint is received.
- -
- E2: A complaint is registered.
- -
- E3: A questionnaire is sent to the complainant.
- -
- E4: A deadline for a response is set to two weeks.
- -
- E5: A complaint is processed to generate an evaluation.
- -
- E6: The complainant responds to the questionnaire within the deadline.
- -
- E7: A complaint’s response is forwarded to be actually processed along with its complaint copy and evaluation copy.
- -
- E8: The actual process is executed for a complaint, and a result is generated.
- -
- E9: The deadline for a complainant’s response has passed; hence, the questionnaire is discarded.
- -
- E10: The result of the actual processing of the complaint is checked (12).
- -
- E11: The result is not okay (13); hence, the complaint is reprocessed.
- -
- E12: The result is okay, and the questionnaire has already been archived; hence, a notice is sent to inform the complainant about the completion of the complaint handling.
Conclusion
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