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Past, present and future = change?
I have had ,in the past the belief that time required motion to exist.However I have been assured that clocks that rely on radioactive decay show that this is not the case.(no motion)
I like a good debate but the concept of time seems to be flogged to death for no reason. It is simply a mechanical means of measurement of change in one form or another. The fact that those mechanics don't always run at the same pace in different frames is not that difficult.
If anyone has used a stopwatch they are aware of time as a measurement of change.
I like a good debate but the concept of time seems to be flogged to death for no reason.
It is simply a mechanical means of measurement of change in one form or another.
"Change" tells you that time exists.
But "change", by itself, doesn't explain the other major characteristic of time: That it seems to travel in only one direction.
For this you have to look at entropy: Time flows in the direction where entropy increases.
Doesn’t the second law of thermodynamics state that in a closed system, entropy tends to increase, or to remain constant. In spite of the presence of the word “tends”, the assertion “it never decreases” can still be found attached to many explanations. Could this be a source of confused thinking? Even in a closed system, can “time progress” in the direction of decreasing entropy?
OK then. Are the motions of all the bodies in the solar system time reversible? Would they act in exactly the same manner if they were run backwards? We can treat these objects as point particles mathematically. How does this impact entropy?
In spite of the presence of the word “tends”, the assertion “it never decreases” can still be found attached to many explanations.
Quote from: jeffreyH on 04/01/2019 21:45:21OK then. Are the motions of all the bodies in the solar system time reversible? Would they act in exactly the same manner if they were run backwards? We can treat these objects as point particles mathematically. How does this impact entropy?Motions that do not involve entropy would be reversible. Everything would spin and orbit the other way, and it wouldn't look wrong. But the sun would continue to burn fuel. Tidal forces would continue to push the moon outward, not a reversal of its trend now. Tidal friction is entropic, so it is one-way.If you treat objects as mathematical points, then there is no combustion and no tidal drift. The reversed solar system would be mathematically perfectly a rewind of prior state.
If you treat objects as mathematical points, then there is no combustion and no tidal drift. The reversed solar system would be mathematically perfectly a rewind of prior state.
Therefore the quantum changes guarantee that the gravitational system is not time reversible. So that answers the original question. Time is inherent to QM. Thus QM modifies general relativity and not the other way round.