IF the hours were 60 minutes.

Ha. This is the example my kids gave. I didn't believe them. I insisted clocks are calibrated to work based on time as we know it. Therefore as a minute of our time passes the clock must go forward a minute unless it is broken.Actually, yes, they would. Time slows down as you approach the speed of light. Say you have 2 matched atomic clocks. You put one in a rocket ship and launch it, say to circle Mars and then return to Earth. The other clock stays here on Earth with you. When your rocket lands back on Earth, the 2 clocks will be out of sync. The one that took the rocket ride will read an earlier time than the clock that stayed on Earth. It will only be a tiny, tiny fraction of a second off, but still....
ETA- found the equation: time delta on Earth = time delta in rocket * 1/sqrt(1-((v*v)/(c*c)))
where v=velocity of the rocket & c = speed of light. as v->c, time delta -> infinity

Ha. This is the example my kids gave. I didn't believe them. I insisted clocks are calibrated to work based on time as we know it. Therefore as a minute of our time passes the clock must go forward a minute unless it is broken.
I have no idea but your either drinking or thinking too much.
You are right about the average person not getting it. But an above average person would LOVE to sit down and talk with a theoretical physicist. You can't beat the kind of mind that comes with doing theoretical gymnastics all the time.I have a son and dd who are very interested in theoretical physics. My one son told me yesterday he was considering going back to school to study this. I told him that it is not possible for a theoretical physicist to present proof of his theories to an average person, proofs that are observable and measurable and time travel was one of the examples I gave. This discussion was part of his argument. It makes my head hurt.