Showing posts with label Time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Time. Show all posts

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Is Time an Illusion? (Preview)

(Thought-Random)

The concepts of time and change may emerge from a universe that, at root, is utterly static
In Brief
  • Time is an especially hot topic right now in physics. The search for a unified theory is forcing physicists to reexamine very basic assumptions, and few things are more basic than time.
  • Some physicists argue that there is no such thing as time. Others think time ought to be promoted rather than demoted. In between these two positions is the fascinating idea that time exists but is not fundamental. A static world somehow gives rise to the time we perceive.
  • Philosophers have debated such ideas since before the time of Socrates, but physicists are now making them concrete. According to one, time may arise from the way that the universe is partitioned; what we perceive as time reflects the relations among its pieces.
 ____________________________________________________

As you read this sentence, you probably think that this moment—right now—is what is happening. The present moment feels special. It is real. However much you may remember the past or anticipate the future, you live in the present. Of course, the moment during which you read that sentence is no longer happening. This one is. In other words, it feels as though time flows, in the sense that the present is constantly updating itself. We have a deep intuition that the future is open until it becomes present and that the past is fixed. As time flows, this structure of fixed past, immediate present and open future gets carried forward in time. This structure is built into our language, thought and behavior. How we live our lives hangs on it.

Yet as natural as this way of thinking is, you will not find it reflected in science. The equations of physics do not tell us which events are occurring right now—they are like a map without the “you are here” symbol. The present moment does not exist in them, and therefore neither does the flow of time. Additionally, Albert Einstein’s theories of relativity suggest not only that there is no single special present but also that all moments are equally real [see “That Mysterious Flow,” by Paul Davies; Scientific American, September 2002]. Fundamentally, the future is no more open than the past.



This article was originally published with the title Is Time an Illusion?.
From Scientific American, May 24, 2010



Time.....

(Thought-Random)



                      .......flies out of my hand like sand in the wind!
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    -Victor Hugo



Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Tell me this...

(Thought-Random)

Why do intense moments have to be short-lived?
Better still -
Why do short-lived moments have to be intense?

Sunday, February 3, 2013

February 4 - Once upon a cloud

Thought-Random:

         Through my window this cloud,
          its backdrop the blue sky makes.

         And in this morning fair assumes
         a giant bear, then a mountain -
         Now it shifts into an open book, into
         a wine glass, into a - what's this?

         This face outline it now assumes, I just
         had in my mind!  But it goes,  yes, it fades.

         Just like time, it slips away!

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

January 15 - My Share of Time

Thought-Random:

 
       Anika comes through the door, runs up the stairs, walks a little to where I am seated in front of my computer  - as I try to figure out what grade I should give  this essay of my online student.

        So she comes up to me, gives me a tight hug, followed by a kiss on my cheek which seems to encapsulate both her and my "I missed you!"  But now I say to her, "You're home? .. but you just left!"  To which she answers, "I went to school this morning, Grama, but now it's afternoon, so I come home!  What are you talking about?"

        Right!  What am I talking about?  I'm not sure now but maybe, just maybe, I had just given up a bit of my life unknowingly into a fold in time right in front of my computer!