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The Many Directions of Time
http://www.stanford.edu/~afmayer/ ^
| 1 February 2006
| Alexander Franklin Mayer
Posted on 02/05/2006 1:48:11 PM PST by ckilmer
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To: ckilmer
Imagine that 'the arrow of time' in the Universe, like gravity on Earth, is pretty much the same everywhere, yet also different everywhere relative to everywhere else. That means that the 'arrow of time' points in different directions in spacetime depending on where you are, so time has a geometry just like space has a geometry.
A natural progression of relativity?
21
posted on
02/05/2006 2:34:25 PM PST
by
R. Scott
(Humanity i love you because when you're hard up you pawn your Intelligence to buy a drink.)
To: Balding_Eagle
Not only that, but this Arrow of Time business must cease forthwith. Even in physics, where time is memorialized as a dimension, and unnecessarily, it makes no difference at all if events move forward or backward in time.
22
posted on
02/05/2006 2:36:41 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(pas de lieu, Rhone que nous)
To: RightWhale
There is nonuniformity, but space and time are not the real dimensions.What causes us to think that they are?
23
posted on
02/05/2006 2:38:22 PM PST
by
inquest
(If you favor any legal status for illegal aliens, then do not claim to be in favor of secure borders)
To: RightWhale
Everything that is happening right
now and
now and
now is happening at once, but everything that has ever happened and will ever happen can not happen at once.
This process we call time and it is measured by the rotation of the earth and its revolution around the sun.
Time isn't a perception. It really exists.
To: RightWhale
Even in physics, where time is memorialized as a dimension, and unnecessarily, it makes no difference at all if events move forward or backward in time.Isn't there something in one of the laws of thermodynamics about entropy increasing over time?
25
posted on
02/05/2006 2:39:27 PM PST
by
inquest
(If you favor any legal status for illegal aliens, then do not claim to be in favor of secure borders)
To: inquest
Some of the people who think that are the ones who never got beyond freshman physics. But, we need some fresh insight because this old business is getting us nowhere.
26
posted on
02/05/2006 2:40:47 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(pas de lieu, Rhone que nous)
To: inquest
Entropy has nothing to do with time, mythology aside.
27
posted on
02/05/2006 2:41:38 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(pas de lieu, Rhone que nous)
To: Bear_Slayer
We aren't seeing with startling clarity this morning. Just a bunch of tired analogies.
28
posted on
02/05/2006 2:43:20 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(pas de lieu, Rhone que nous)
To: RightWhale
We aren't seeing with startling clarity this morning We, as in you?
let me quote you, "it does." and I've already quoted you above.
Is there some thing you think I'm missing? Tell me so or bugger off.
To: Bear_Slayer
Quote this: time is not a necessary dimension in physics.
30
posted on
02/05/2006 2:51:26 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(pas de lieu, Rhone que nous)
To: RightWhale
If by "mythology" you mean currently accepted physics, then I remind you that your point at #22 specifically allowed for that. The Second Law of Thermodynamics states: "The total entropy of any thermodynamically isolated system tends to increase over time, approaching a maximum value".
Now if you want to say that that statement is wrong, that's fine. But you specifically said that "even in physics" the directionality of time is irrelevant. According to the currently accepted understanding of physics, your statement is false, unless you can cite an authority in physics that says that that law I quoted is no longer considered valid.
31
posted on
02/05/2006 2:52:58 PM PST
by
inquest
(If you favor any legal status for illegal aliens, then do not claim to be in favor of secure borders)
To: All
I heard about this theory a couple years ago in the future.
32
posted on
02/05/2006 2:56:06 PM PST
by
Jonah Johansen
("Coming soon to a neighborhood near you")
To: RightWhale
[[There is nonuniformity, but space and time are not the real dimensions.]] [What causes us to think that they are?]
Some of the people who think that are the ones who never got beyond freshman physics.
I'm not talking about people with an insufficient education in physics. What I was asking is what causes us instinctively to view space and time as real dimensions, if in fact they're not.
33
posted on
02/05/2006 2:57:05 PM PST
by
inquest
(If you favor any legal status for illegal aliens, then do not claim to be in favor of secure borders)
To: inquest
Got pressure, volume, temperature in gases. Got heat and temperature in entropy. The statement cited is faulty.
34
posted on
02/05/2006 2:58:21 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(pas de lieu, Rhone que nous)
To: ClearCase_guy
I read this article before I decided not to open it.
This explains John Kerry - he does not live in time as the rest of us understand it.
35
posted on
02/05/2006 2:58:47 PM PST
by
AD from SpringBay
(We have the government we allow and deserve.)
To: inquest
That's a more productive approach. It might be that time and space are not instinctive at all. Until Mersenne they were hardly known at all. Even in the Bible, to get an idea of how these things were thought of, time was not linear but cyclical, and in popular thought Persephone was kidnapped every year.
36
posted on
02/05/2006 3:01:39 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(pas de lieu, Rhone que nous)
To: RightWhale
Got pressure, volume, temperature in gases. Got heat and temperature in entropy.Don't got heat in gases?
37
posted on
02/05/2006 3:01:53 PM PST
by
inquest
(If you favor any legal status for illegal aliens, then do not claim to be in favor of secure borders)
To: inquest
Not in Boyle's law. You'd think that with a name like Boyle there would be some mention of heat.
38
posted on
02/05/2006 3:04:24 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(pas de lieu, Rhone que nous)
To: ckilmer
I am such a sucker for this stuff. I will buy this guy's book sight unseen.
To: ckilmer
Ah, yes, time flies like an arrow. On the other hand, fruit flies like a banana.
40
posted on
02/05/2006 3:07:00 PM PST
by
Hootowl
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