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The experience of time Issue1 #103807 This branch of the map considers the phenomenology of time - the various ways in which time presents itself directly to our consciousness. Why do we think time has the features indicated by the passage view? The answers will hopefully enable us to connect the phenomenological to the physical. | As a starting point, we consider the three features that make up the 'passage' view of time: The passage view notes that we perceive: - A distinguished present moment.
- A 'flow' of time (becoming).
- A direction of time.
According to the passage view, these are more than just perceptions - they are features of the real world revealed to us through the 'private door' of consciousness (see Eddington citation below). But are they? Our approach here is to begin by asking some questions about why we think time has these features, then to relate these to the workings of mind - memory in particular. This provides a bridge to the physical world, since the recording of memories is an increasingly well understood physical process. Having connected our perceptions of time to the physical world it then becomes appropriate to ask: Why are the psychological and thermodynamic arrows aligned? Eddington hypothesized that the brain keeps track of time using 'entropy clocks', though there is little evidence for this. Alternative approaches take us into the realm of information theory. Some authors appear to simply presume that the arrows must align, while others have attempted to prove that memories can only be formed in the direction of increasing entropy. This part of the map includes two attempted formal demonstrations, one appealing to an analogy between human and computer memories and a different approach that draws on quantum theory. Do they stack up? It would seem not - powerful objections have been mounted against both. So where does that leave us? These questions are addressed in this part of the map. In addition to the passage view components, two additional aspects of how we perceive time - two additional asymmetries - are considered: - The asymmetry of agency - the fact we think we can influence the future through our actions, but not the past.
- The asymmetry of concern - we worry about a visit to the dentist tomorrow more than one that took place yesterday.
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+Citations (2) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] Time's Arrow and Eddington's Challenge (article)
Author: Huw Price - Director, Center for Time, University of Sydney Cited by: Peter Baldwin 5:35 AM 6 May 2011 GMT Citerank: (6) 100641The Arrow of Time?A map exploring some issues concerning the nature of time that lie at the boundary of physics and philosophy. The map follows up a talk to the Blackheath Philosophy Forum on 2 April 2011 by Huw Price, Professor of Philosophy and director of the Center for Time at Sydney University.7F1CEB7, 103810Why do we see an entropy gradient?We find ourselves in an observable universe in which entropy increases consistently in one direction, thereby showing time asymmetry - an arrow of time. Yet the vast majority of underlying dynamical processes are time-symmetric. How to account for this? Two broad approaches are considered here.8FFB597, 103810Why do we see an entropy gradient?We find ourselves in an observable universe in which entropy increases consistently in one direction, thereby showing time asymmetry - an arrow of time. Yet the vast majority of underlying dynamical processes are time-symmetric. How to account for this? Two broad approaches are considered here.8FFB597, 104152Past hypothesisWe inhabit a universe - or part thereof - characterized by a low-entropy past that has enabled the evolution of intelligent observers to occur. This together with Boltzmann's probabilistic argument (see sibling node) implies entropy will increase over time toward thermal equilibrium.109FDEF6, 104155Boltzmann-Schuetz hypothesisBoltzmann and Schuetz claimed that in a universe that is near thermal equilibrium, and given sufficient time, there will be regions where there is a temporary deviation into a low entropy state, from which it will trend back to equilibrium. Anthropic selection accounts for us being in such a region.959C6EF, 105365Anti-matter objectionIf the time-asymmetry of thermodynamics were associated with the symmetry violation of the neutral K meson (neutral Kaon) then anti-matter would show the reverse of the normal thermodynamic asymmetry AND no such anti-matter reversal is apparent.13EF597B URL: | Excerpt / Summary "In particular, I think it is helpful to distinguish three distinct elements in dynamic conception. These elements tend to be bundled together, but in principle they can be separated, and defended in almost any combination. (We already encountered two of them in Section 2, when we considered what Eddington has in mind when he discusses `time's arrow'.)
1. The view that the present moment is objectively distinguished, and that reality is objectively divided into past, present and future. 2. The view that time has an objective direction that it is an objective matter which of two non-simultaneous events is the earlier and which the later. 3. The view that there is something objectively flow-like" about time that time - really "goes on", as Eddington puts it.
Philosophers who defend the Block Universe picture tend to be steadfast in their rejection of (1) and (3), and a little bit more open minded about (2). In physics, however, it easy to find famous critics of all three elements." |
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