Time Is there a clock anywhere?. Yesterday is but a memory Tomorrow is but a dream Today is the...

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Time

Is there a clock anywhere?

Yesterday is but a memoryTomorrow is but a dream

Today is the reality

As you read this sentence, from start to finish, you may or may not recognize the flow of time.

Did time really flow, or was that just an illusion?

Is the future open and changeable, until it becomes the present?

Is the past really fixed?

J.R.R. Tolkien said that there were different levels of reality.

One level of reality is that of a past which really did happen, even though it may or may not be known.

J.R.R. Tolkien said that there were different levels of reality.

One level of reality is that of a past which really did happen, even though it may or may not be known.

Another (second) level of reality is that which is known (or believed) by everyone, even though conflicts with the first level of reality.

J.R.R. Tolkien said that there were different levels of reality.

One level of reality is that of a past which really did happen, even though it may or may not be known.

Another (second) level of reality is that which is known (or believed) by everyone, even though conflicts with the first level of reality.

J.R.R. Tolkien believed that the second level of reality was the only one that had validity.

Albert Einstein’s theories of relativity suggest that there is no one single piece of time, and that all moments are equally real.

Is time fundamentally real?

An analogy is this…is a chair fundamentally real?

A chair ~ certainly looks, feels, smells, and acts real. Is is made ofWood and leather, which is made of

A chair ~ certainly looks, feels, smells, and acts real. Is is made ofWood and leather, which is made ofStarches, Proteins, Sugars, which are made of

A chair ~ certainly looks, feels, smells, and acts real. Is is made ofWood and leather, which is made ofStarches, Proteins, Sugars, which are made ofPolypeptides, which are made of

A chair ~ certainly looks, feels, smells, and acts real. Is is made ofWood and leather, which is made ofStarches, Proteins, Sugars, which are made ofPolypeptides, which are made ofCompounds of elements, which are made of

A chair ~ certainly looks, feels, smells, and acts real. Is is made ofWood and leather, which is made ofStarches, Proteins, Sugars, which are made ofPolypeptides, which are made ofCompounds of elements, which are made ofAtoms, which are made ofProtons, Neutrons, Electrons, which are made of

A chair ~ certainly looks, feels, smells, and acts real. Is is made ofWood and leather, which is made ofStarches, Proteins, Sugars, which are made ofPolypeptides, which are made ofCompounds of elements, which are made ofAtoms, which are made ofProtons, Neutrons, Electrons, which are made ofQuarks, and Empty space, which are made of

A chair ~ certainly looks, feels, smells, and acts real. Is is made ofWood and leather, which is made ofStarches, Proteins, Sugars, which are made ofPolypeptides, which are made ofCompounds of elements, which are made ofAtoms, which are made ofProtons, Neutrons, Electrons, which are made ofQuarks, and Empty space, which are made ofStrings of energy, and nothing …. Which is not a chair on a fundamental level

This is another quark.

This is his glamour shot.

Make time, or get rid of it.

Sir Issac Newton had three great laws

1.Things like to keep doing, what they are already doing, in straight line.

Make time, or get rid of it.

Sir Issac Newton had three great laws

1.Things like to keep doing, what they are already doing, in straight line.2.Force equals Mass times Acceleration

Make time, or get rid of it.

Sir Issac Newton had three great laws

1.Things like to keep doing, what they are already doing, in straight line.2.Force equals Mass times Acceleration3.Each action has an equal and opposite reaction

Make time, or get rid of it.

Sir Issac Newton had three great laws

1.Things like to keep doing, what they are already doing, in straight line.2.Force equals Mass times Acceleration3.Each action has an equal and opposite reaction

With this…everyone had to agree that there was a sequence of events

Example with the equation force = mass x acceleration.1.An object is given a mass of 10 kg.2.The object is given a velocity (say zero)3.A force is applied4.The object accelerates

There is a flow to the sequence of events. Time gives it an order.The object cannot accelerate BEFORE the force is applied

Time must also have an idea, or a notion, or duration.

An example is that Tony and Tina both left home for 3 hours.

In order for them to meet back at the same time, an hour has to mean the same thing to both of them.

An example is that Tyson is going to eat 25 chicken wings in one hour. Time has to endure for an hour to find his wing eating rate.

In order to find the rate, time has to endure, even though it is in the past.

Newton said (but not in so many words), that the world exists within the confines of an enormous clock, and everybody works within that clock.

That “clock” said, if Newton is correct, that time

a. Has order

Newton said (but not in so many words), that the world exists within the confines of an enormous clock, and everybody works within that clock.

That “clock” said, if Newton is correct, that time

a.Has orderb.Has continuity

Newton said (but not in so many words), that the world exists within the confines of an enormous clock, and everybody works within that clock.

That “clock” said, if Newton is correct, that time

a.Has orderb.Has continuityc.Has duration

Newton said (but not in so many words), that the world exists within the confines of an enormous clock, and everybody works within that clock.

That “clock” said, if Newton is correct, that time

a.Has orderb.Has continuityc.Has durationd.Has simultaneity

Newton said (but not in so many words), that the world exists within the confines of an enormous clock, and everybody works within that clock.

That “clock” said, if Newton is correct, that time

a.Has orderb.Has continuityc.Has durationd.Has simultaneitye.Has flow

Newton said (but not in so many words), that the world exists within the confines of an enormous clock, and everybody works within that clock.

That “clock” said, if Newton is correct, that time

a.Has orderb.Has continuityc.Has durationd.Has simultaneitye.Has flowf.Has duration

Taken as a whole, this is called “time”.

Assaults on the castle time.Ludwig Boltzmann (an Austrian) reasoned, and proved, that Newton’s equations worked equally well going forward or backward in time, so time must not have a built in arrow.

Assaults on the castle

time.Einstein showed, in his special theory of relativity, that

1.What two people are doing at the same time depends upon the speed at which they are moving.

2.Events don’t happen in a place or at a certain time, but they happen in a union of space and time, called spacetime.

Assaults on the castle time.

Einstein showed, in his general theory of relativity that ….

1.If the theory of special relativity, and spacetime put a heavy load on the idea of a master clock, called time, then the theory of general relativity crushed it.

2.The introduction of gravity as a distortion tool for time makes it impossible for any two clocks to be synchronized, even if they started out that way.

A summary of time, according to Einstien, would say that either

a.There are no clocks in the universe

or

b. There are many clocks, and each works with only a very small part of the Universe, or to a particular object.

Quantum Time

Quantum Mechanics says that, there are probablilities of different outcomes.

1.Time is that thing that makes the contradictions of probabilities happen.A rolled dice cannot have both the 3 and the 6 showing.Changes in quantum fluctions must be chromatic.

2.Quantum mechanics provides for quantum probabilities and possibilities for all of space at the same time.Entanglement implies “spooky action at a distance”, and is dependent upon a master universal clock.This is why Einstien hated, hated, hated quantum mechanics

Quantum mechanics, which is 1.Tested2.Proven3.Gives unerringly correct results4.The basis for computers, light science and statistical experimentationneeds for the Universe to have a Master Clock

General relativity, which is1.Tested2.Proven3.Gives unerringly correct results4.The basis for nuclear physics, astronomyexpressly forbids a Master Clock

Do we really need time?

Time is a placekeepper, like dollar bills.

Our class will let out in 375 heartbeats.

Light travels 240,000,000 meters per beat

Schrodinger’s CatIf we get rid of time, it can bea.Dead with respect to itselfb.Alive with respect to the person in the roomc.Dead with respect to another person in the hallwayThe situation (life and death) of the cat is never resolved.

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