Talk:Vector Manipulation/@comment-7851571-20160626014921/@comment-5265497-20160626140010

Even in general relativity and according to your link, TIME itself is not a vector unless it's completely a product of spacetime because you have a metric system that can support it. If you're not including space, it's either consideredy a scalar or technically neither in any system because it is not a relativistic invariant hence why different observers measure time differently. Now a time interval can be considered a vector if that's where you're going with it. And vectors do not have to always move to be considered a vector.