What Drives Time Forward in Our Universe?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the nature of time and what drives it forward in the universe. Participants explore various theories and concepts related to time, including its relationship with movement, entropy, and the implications of relativity. The conversation includes both philosophical and scientific perspectives, touching on theoretical implications and personal interpretations.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that time requires an initial force to move through its dimension, questioning if something analogous to a force existed at the Big Bang.
  • Another participant clarifies that time is a time-like dimension, highlighting the importance of its mathematical representation in the Minkowski metric.
  • Some argue that time is merely a comparison of movement and that its forward motion is an illusion, while others propose that entropy drives the forward motion of time.
  • One participant presents the idea that time could be viewed as a tool for understanding, with entropy representing the natural phenomenon we call time.
  • Another participant asserts that time is real and cannot be dismissed as an illusion, emphasizing its necessity in describing motion.
  • There is a discussion about the speculative nature of linking entropy or probability to the forward motion of time, with some participants questioning the validity of these claims.
  • One participant posits that the universe could theoretically be described without time, although it would be cumbersome.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the nature of time, with no consensus reached. Some agree on the mathematical representation of time, while others contest the idea of time as an illusion or its relationship with entropy and probability.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the speculative nature of linking entropy and probability to the concept of time, indicating that these ideas may not be universally accepted or established in the scientific community.

Dauden
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I'm a student in Physics and I've been doing some thinking on my own (dangerous, I know).

Something occurred to me about time. It moves in a direction constantly and at different rates. Since time is a dimension like the spatial ones we know love, and it moves through it, what pushes it through that dimension? Right as I typed that I have come to the realization that that question might just be one of those unanswerable absurd questions.

Anyway, things require some kind of initial force to move them through the spatial dimensions. That fact makes me believe there is something analogous when looking at time. Was there some initial 'force' that pushed it during the Big Bang? Also, time dilation slows the rate of time so is there some opposing force?

Time being a non-spatial dimension might blow up that theory though.

Now, I'm hoping this isn't just another "If E = mc^2 is true, shouldn't photons have mass?" type of question. I can't really find any sort of answer to this through any information website or book. Any thoughts?
 
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Dauden said:
Time being a non-spatial dimension might blow up that theory though.

Quite right, and time is not a spatial dimension (it's a time-like dimension!). To illustrate what I mean, refer to the standard minkowski metric:
ds^2=-dt^2+dx^2+dy^2+dz^2
Note that the time component has a sign opposite to that of the spatial dimensions! This opposite sign is very important. If time were just another one of the boys, the metric would look like
ds^2=dt^2+dx^2+dy^2+dz^2
Which is just a 4-dimensional flat space (no time!). Fortunately for us, the sign is in fact different and we get to experience a whole world of interesting phenomenon.
 
Time is just a comparison of movement though and movement is again a measurement of space. When a pendulum moves across x amount of space you tick off another mark of time.

It is no wonder it dilates in different reference frames.

Therefore there isn't really anything to "drive" forward. Just a persistent illusion.
 
Probability drives it forward. :p
 
Pretty sure Entropy can be thought of as the forward motion of time. Try putting all of the carbon molecules back into the can of pop you just opened. Good luck with that. Also, another idea is try to put an egg back together after it has been shattered on the floor. Not only would you have to get every piece of the shell, the yolk, etc, but you would also have to somehow gather the energy back out of the floor that went into it when the egg collided with it. As you can see, both feats are practically or perhaps theoretically impossible, due to Entropy. You can't undo what has been done.
 
I think of it in a similar way as Fuzzystuff.

A second is just an arbitrary number of transitions between levels of ground state of cesium. Time, and its units, are simply tools for understanding. I think of entropy as the natural phenomenon we call time. Looked at that way, time isn't driven forward. It's more like it's falling down as our systems tend toward equilibrium.
 
there is no such thing as time. just a figment of our imaginations. Albert Einstein was the smartest man to ever live and he said time is just an illusion.
 
"Right as I typed that I have come to the realization that that question might just be one of those unanswerable absurd questions"

unanswerable yes, absurd no...
we are just not smart enough yet...It's like asking what is matter, what is space, what is a particle??


shouldn't photons have mass?"

not really. maybe in another universe...your formula is only a piece of the whole...

Try here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Momentum


The total energy E of a body is related to the relativistic momentum p by

E2 = (pc) + (m0c2)2
where p denotes the magnitude of p. This relativistic energy-momentum relationship holds even for massless particles such as photons; by setting m0 = 0 it follows that

E = m0c2

For both massive and massless objects, relativistic momentum is related to the de Broglie wavelength λ by

E = pc and p = h/lambda


where h is the Planck constant.

Those few formulas tie a lot of pieces together...

There is no theory that either probability nor entropy "drive time forward"...thats speculative..but increasing entropy does point in the same direction as "the arrow of time",,,meaning the evolution of time.

"It moves in a direction constantly and at different rates."

Time moves according to the observer, not at arbitrarily different rates. My local time ALWAYS moves at the same pace...so does yours; but as you observe my time, it varies according to your relative speed. and vice versa.

Likewise, in a high gravitational potential, my time still passes the same for me (locally) but you will observe my passage of time from a distant point as slowing relative to yours. I see yours as faster than mine...it's relative as is velocity according to relativity.
 
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rhit2013 said:
there is no such thing as time. just a figment of our imaginations. Albert Einstein was the smartest man to ever live and he said time is just an illusion.

Einstein was a genius, but he never said time was an illusion, at least not in the idea you're meaning. Time is real, it's just as real as space. You cannot even describe motion without using both space *and* time. Einstein even made up a new word, space-time, a combination of the 3 dimensions of space and 1 dimension of time, to describe how the universe works.

Naty1 said:
There is no theory that either probability nor entropy "drive time forward"...thats speculative..but increasing entropy does point in the same direction as "the arrow of time",,,meaning the evolution of time.

"It moves in a direction constantly and at different rates."

Time moves according to the observer, not at arbitrarily different rates. My local time ALWAYS moves at the same pace...so does yours; but as you observe my time, it varies according to your relative speed. and vice versa.

Likewise, in a high gravitational potential, my time still passes the same for me (locally) but you will observe my passage of time from a distant point as slowing relative to yours. I see yours as faster than mine...it's relative as is velocity according to relativity.

This is due to motion and the phenomena that light always travels at c, no matter how fast you are traveling relative to another observer. So that is correct. Light always travels at c, no matter how fast you try to catch up to it, you can't.

Entropy though, mathematically, suggests that it can move in reverse. Ice cubes can melt in room temperature, and they can also solidify in room temperature, if you only discuss mathematics of Entropy. That is not how it works in reality. Ice cubes do not solidify in room temperature, but they instead melt. It's probable that they could solidify, but the probability of them doing that is practically impossible. So Entropy has this tendency to make ice cubes melt in room temperature, but does not have the tendency to make them solidify in room temperature. It goes against thermodynamics.

It's speculative that Entropy is the answer to the forward motion of time simply because the forward motion of time cannot be described mathematically. You can always reverse mathematics. There also stands the chance that Entropy could have worked in reverse at some point in the past (or at some point in the future), so this is why it is also speculative.
 
  • #10
I think you could describe the universe without time. It would just be very tedious as you would need to account for the motion of all objects instead of comparing everything to one objects motion (what we refer to as time).
 
  • #11
Fuzzystuff said:
Einstein was a genius, but he never said time was an illusion, at least not in the idea you're meaning.

There is a quote somewhere out there of a eulogy Einstein gave for one of his best friends where he said, "time is an illusion; that we who know, know that there is no difference between the past, the present, and the future."

Now, was Einstein being literal or just saying that his friend will live on forever? I've given thought to the question of what "drives" time, and Entropy is indeed a good answer; however, what happens during a true isentropic process? Maybe, at the core of it, time is really just the rate at which information is exchanged. If absolutely zero information is exchanged, how could anyone or anything, regardless of their frame of reference, argue that time has progressed forward? The fact that there is a fundamental limit of how fast information can be exchanged also explains how different observers can divide time up differently.
 
  • #12
Describing the universe without time would appear to be a snapshot. There would be no movement.
 
  • #13
6Stang7 said:
There is a quote somewhere out there of a eulogy Einstein gave for one of his best friends where he said, "time is an illusion; that we who know, know that there is no difference between the past, the present, and the future."

Now, was Einstein being literal or just saying that his friend will live on forever?


I've given thought to the question of what "drives" time, and Entropy is indeed a good answer; however, what happens during a true isentropic process? Maybe, at the core of it, time is really just the rate at which information is exchanged. If absolutely zero information is exchanged, how could anyone or anything, regardless of their frame of reference, argue that time has progressed forward?

Space-time can be thought of, in Einstein's eyes, as a gigantic frozen block of ice. All movement, ever, is inside this block of ice. Does the block of ice exist? Is it completely deterministic?

And you're right. If there is no information being exchanged or "moving", then there is no time. Try observing a situation like this.
 
  • #14
Funny how we all have the sense of time. Yet the only thing in the universe that is constant (light) experiences no time.
 
  • #15
Fuzzystuff said:
Space-time can be thought of, in Einstein's eyes, as a gigantic frozen block of ice. All movement, ever, is inside this block of ice. Does the block of ice exist? Is it completely deterministic?

The universe may be deterministic, meaning that the future state of a system is determined by its present or past conditions, but that does not mean the future is predictable. Consider how difficult a system with only 3 bodies is to solve.

The quote is:
einstein said:
"Now he has departed from this strange world a little ahead of me. That means nothing. People like us, who believe in physics, know that the distinction between past, present, and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion. "


Interesting point 6Stang7. In an isentropic reaction there is change without an increase or decrease in entropy. My response would be that the entropy of the processes in our brains cause us to perceive the procession of time as moving forward. This has the effect of us describing our observations of the natural world in terms of those perceptions.

I would argue that for something without consciousness there is no direction for time. There are no perceptions at all.

If it is possible to describe the universe without time (for more than just a "snapshot"), I'm curious as to how. The only way I can think of would be to know the entirety of the universe from "beginning" to "end" and to describe paths rather than objects. This would require more knowledge than it is foreseeable that we will ever be able to attain.

And one nit-picky thing: Light does not always move at c. It is quite capable of moving more slowly than this.
 

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