Did you know that no known law of physics, not a one, has a preference for going "forward" in time versus backwards? That means that the laws of the universe we are able to objectively define have no preference for either direction, backward or forward in time. But yet we remember the past and not the future.I created this thread so people could argue as to why that is, and so I could tell them why they're wrong.It's time we get some real philosophy on this site!
6/30/2011 7:33:34 PM
afaik, there are no hardcore physicists/philosophers on this site with loads of experience/research under their belts.
6/30/2011 7:40:02 PM
i thought if you traveled close to or at the speed of light special relativity says time passes slower for you?so if you were flying in your spaceship and someone with a telescope looking in the window you would be moving in slow motion or not at all?if you returned to earth after traveling at this speed for so long not much time would have passed for you but hundreds of years could have passed on earth.isnt this time travel into the future? or does it simply mean time went faster for everyone else?seems like i read this in a "science of star wars explained" book, so im by no means right or an expert.[Edited on June 30, 2011 at 7:49 PM. Reason : "]
6/30/2011 7:45:28 PM
^pretty sure that was the premise for the movie, "Contact"
6/30/2011 7:50:10 PM
OH YEAH.but that was written by carl sagan right and he generally knew his stuff amirite?time dilation is cool too.from wikipedia:"It has been calculated that, under general relativity, a person could travel forward in time at a rate four times that of distant observers by residing inside a spherical shell with a diameter of 5 meters and the mass of Jupiter.[22] For such a person, every one second of their "personal" time would correspond to four seconds for distant observers. Of course, squeezing the mass of a large planet into such a structure is not expected to be within our technological capabilities in the near future."i read something along these lines one time that said if you had a cylinder of infinite length weighing about as much as the universe and spun it at a few billion rpm, you could fly around it in a corkscrew fashion and go backwards/forwards in time.it said it didnt have to be of infinite length to work, but was advisable since really weird things would happen to you if you flew near either end? whatever. shit blows my mind.every movie ever with time travel confused me.
6/30/2011 7:55:12 PM
^^^ So, time travel into the future is easy. Case in pointhttp://www.futureme.org/Einstein just made it easier.Time travel to the past is really super-duper difficult.[Edited on June 30, 2011 at 7:58 PM. Reason : ]
6/30/2011 7:58:41 PM
< -- stupid[Edited on June 30, 2011 at 7:59 PM. Reason : ]
6/30/2011 7:59:07 PM
mrfrog i dont think that really changes how we perceive time.my example did. my example causes something AMAZING to happen for both parties involved.people on earth see you not moving or barelyy moving for hundreds of years, not aging.you come back to a bunch of weird future shit.i guess if we could travel at or near the speed of light all kinds of cool things would happen?<-----stupid also
6/30/2011 8:13:28 PM
Time dilation is a proven fact, by the way. GPS satellites have to be adjusted to compensate for it. I saw the calculations recently suggesting that while time moves slower from the perspective of GPS satellites due to their speed, their distance from the earth's gravity negates this effect and time actually moves faster from the satellite's perspective overall.The opposite is true for astronauts since they are in low earth orbit and speed is the dominating factor on time. From the astronauts perspective time moves slower than on earth...ie astronauts age slightly slower.
6/30/2011 8:28:17 PM
6/30/2011 8:32:14 PM
Plenty of neat arguments in the philosophy of time, but it's certainly not something I'm acquainted with in anything other than a superficial way. I tend to think of time in a Kantian way; it's a precondition for experience/comprehension/cognition. This plugs the question ... clearly you could dig further. This is one of those cases where I'm not willing to go down the rabbit hole, though.
6/30/2011 8:33:06 PM
^^yeah if you jump into a black hole time would slow down so much for you approaching the event horizon no external observer would ever actually see you cross into it.
6/30/2011 8:34:48 PM
6/30/2011 8:37:59 PM
Yes, I had it backwards. It is corrected in my post above. It is GPS satellites and other high orbit objects that don't behave as special relativity alone would predict.
6/30/2011 8:41:22 PM
6/30/2011 8:47:20 PM
^flat earth society study?I thought time was a consequence of the laws of thermodynamics?
6/30/2011 8:54:42 PM
6/30/2011 8:58:02 PM
6/30/2011 9:01:00 PM
^^^^^So these are both pretty much "the answer". Time flows in the direction of increasing entropy.But good subsequent questions remain. Why does entropy increase in the first place... why doesn't it stay the same? Once I start realizing that trivial-seeming things about the world around me comes from statistical emergent phenomena, then I really start to get tripped out.
6/30/2011 9:12:20 PM
6/30/2011 9:13:36 PM
wrong thread![Edited on June 30, 2011 at 9:47 PM. Reason : ]
6/30/2011 9:45:44 PM
Why would anyone be subjectivist about probability? It’s a fact of the universe, quantum mechanics demonstrates this.
6/30/2011 11:03:55 PM
Correct, QM more-or-less establishes that such a thing as "truly random" exists.But most things we consider random are not random. If I make a random number generator it's most likely not random, same with a coin flip. But.... quantum randomness does effect the progression of real events. Where is the borderline? Who knows. But I can build a random # generator using nuclear decay and it will be 100% quantum randomness.Kind of amazing actually. The universe allows both total determinism and total randomness at the same time.Thermo 2nd law, however, depends only on statistics (which has an emergent concept of pseudo randomness, or chaos). Not quantum randomness.
6/30/2011 11:30:45 PM
how much weed could a pothead smoke if a pothead could smoke weed?
6/30/2011 11:41:22 PM
7/1/2011 12:38:36 AM
Walter, don't mind aaronburro. He doesn't think like rational people. If it's not his claim, you must have a level of certainty about your claim that is impossible. He thinks that science needs to explain phenomena to every microsecond and sub-atomic particle for the entirety of phenomena to be able to claim knowledge of the phenomenon. I'm not convinced he actually thinks this way, but it's a silly game that he thinks he can use to dismantle scientific conclusions.[Edited on July 1, 2011 at 12:55 AM. Reason : .]
7/1/2011 12:55:01 AM
so, you deny the well-established results of the Hafele Keating experiment? I'm just curious, since you are accusing me of not knowing a thing about science
7/1/2011 12:56:40 AM
7/1/2011 1:04:48 AM
7/1/2011 1:11:04 AM
7/1/2011 1:15:59 AM
7/1/2011 1:18:52 AM
7/1/2011 6:43:25 AM
7/1/2011 9:05:18 AM
7/1/2011 3:32:20 PM
7/1/2011 3:47:39 PM
people in Ecuador age slower than people in Alaska.
7/1/2011 5:13:16 PM
^ about the only things on Earth it matters for are particles in super accelerators. it matters a great deal to those
7/1/2011 5:18:48 PM
I've never been to the sun. How do I know it's not really a bunch of light-bulbs?
7/1/2011 5:43:36 PM
^ well obviously you don't
7/1/2011 6:04:09 PM
Don't get me wrong. I'm sure the scientists are right when they say the sun is a mass of incandescent gas. A gigantic nuclear furnace, if you will. I'm just saying it might be something else like a giant light bulb that looks and behaves like it's building hydrogen into helium at temperatures of millions of degrees.I don't really know that much about the sun, though. [Edited on July 1, 2011 at 6:43 PM. Reason : ]
7/1/2011 6:41:48 PM
You haven't heard the update. The sun isn't a mass of incandescent gas. The Sun's a miasma of incandescent plasma.
7/1/2011 7:09:12 PM
Can anyone justify evidence that time is actually a real quantity? I have trouble seeing time as anything more than just man's way of compensating for lack of understanding. We use time to help us organize and plan but is it actually a dimension? Do we have proof?The whole time slowing down thing is based on clocks or oscillators. I understand that clocks exist but those are part of manmade time to me.
7/1/2011 7:13:22 PM
^ Time dilation affects natural processes as well, not just man-made clocks and such. Notably:
7/1/2011 8:02:35 PM
^ I think you're misinterpreting his point. It's not that humans made clocks when there were no natural clocks before (untrue in so many ways), but I've known many people to attack the inherency of the thought, the concept, of time itself.Are we really experiencing time, or are we just trapped in a single moment and can't tell? Are the things you are experiencing right now really progressing through time or is it just an illusion? What does memory really mean and tell us? And who are "we"?People made the point about Star Trek that the thing the beams people up could actually be removing "you" from the universe and creating a new you. But the same arguments can apply for any moment in time. Continuity is perceived in our minds, but we don't basis to understand what the truly means.
7/1/2011 10:06:42 PM
7/2/2011 1:37:00 AM
^^ 'Manmade time' implied to me that The E Man questioned whether or not 'real time' is actually affected.In the end, I'm going to follow McDanger and the Kantian way. Time doesn't really exist outside of its use as a mental construct.
7/2/2011 8:04:12 AM
Time is a human construct like numbers are a human construct. Which is to say it isn't. It's a human abstraction of part of the nature of our Universe. Even if humans didn't exist, a square would still have 4 sides. 4 asteroids would still be 4 asteroids and if they existed for a whatever period of time they would have existed for that period of time. Independent of human thought.
7/2/2011 8:52:01 AM
I disagree. Time is not tangible in the same sense that physical quantities are.Sequences of events may occur without the presence of humans (at least to the extent we don't participate in those events). Interpretation of those sequences as the passage of time is not independent of thought.
7/2/2011 9:23:20 AM
How is the interpretation of anything independent of thought?
7/2/2011 3:00:44 PM
without even reading the thread I can promise you thatthere is a lot of nothing going on here...btw, if you want to understand the nature of timeGO BUY A FUCKING STOPWATCH(btw, not bashing the general relativity stuff... that's, of course, awesome) I just know there a bunch of philosophical nonsense in this thread)[Edited on July 2, 2011 at 4:58 PM. Reason : .]
7/2/2011 4:54:50 PM