The Nature of Time: Physicist's Interpretations & Thought Experiments

AI Thread Summary
Physicists have diverse interpretations of time, with discussions focusing on concepts like the non-linear nature of time, the observer's role in defining the present, and the implications of quantum mechanics on time perception. Some argue that the universe may lack a definitive past or future, viewing these as constructs of the observer's current state. Thought experiments, such as the delayed quantum eraser and wormholes, raise questions about the possibility of time travel and the nature of time itself. The transactional interpretation of quantum mechanics and phenomena like entanglement further complicate our understanding of temporal dimensions. Overall, the nature of time remains a complex and debated topic within physics, inviting ongoing exploration and philosophical inquiry.
ijdavis
Messages
6
Reaction score
0
I am interested in how physicists view time, and in any thought experiment (eg. anti-matters time direction, spinning black holes that may have the time dimension no longer orthogonal to the three special directions, delayed quantum eraser experiment that might permit backwards in time signalling, the transactional interpretation of quantum mechanics, entanglement, teleportation, wormholes, negative energy, etc,) that support their interpretation of time. At the most basic level does our current understanding the universe, special and general relativity and quantum mechanics imply that:

a) the universe has no past or future, only unconnected currents. To talk about past or future is simply an artifact of the observers current state, rather than a reality of our universe

b) the current moment is merely an artifact of the observer at some point in space-time. At each point in time the observer naturally claims that the current moment, but past and/or future are as much part of space-time as any labelled present and so as legitimately labelled current time by an alternative observer.

b1) at the level of thought experiment (based on our known universe - not an invented one) time travel is possible, not possible, or is not currently known (assuming b above).

c) some other conclusion
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You can start by reading some of the many physico-philosophical essays about time written physicists; here is a random sampling:

http://users.wfu.edu/brehme/time.htm[/URL]
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_space_and_time[/url]
[url]http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/multimedia/2013/sep/23/lee-smolin-on-the-nature-of-time[/url]
[url]http://fqxi.org/community/forum/category/10[/url]
[url]http://www.nature.com/news/theoretical-physics-the-origins-of-space-and-time-1.13613[/url]
[url]http://www.wired.com/2010/02/what-is-time/[/url]
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • Like
Likes Adam Rifai
Thank you for these references.

Ian
 
Thread 'Question about pressure of a liquid'
I am looking at pressure in liquids and I am testing my idea. The vertical tube is 100m, the contraption is filled with water. The vertical tube is very thin(maybe 1mm^2 cross section). The area of the base is ~100m^2. Will he top half be launched in the air if suddenly it cracked?- assuming its light enough. I want to test my idea that if I had a thin long ruber tube that I lifted up, then the pressure at "red lines" will be high and that the $force = pressure * area$ would be massive...
I feel it should be solvable we just need to find a perfect pattern, and there will be a general pattern since the forces acting are based on a single function, so..... you can't actually say it is unsolvable right? Cause imaging 3 bodies actually existed somwhere in this universe then nature isn't gonna wait till we predict it! And yea I have checked in many places that tiny changes cause large changes so it becomes chaos........ but still I just can't accept that it is impossible to solve...
Back
Top