Books
Ralph Edney,Craig Callender

Introducing Time

  • Mikie Joneshas quoted4 years ago
    hanks to general relativity, the science of spacetime, we can now rigorously investigate questions about time travel, branching time, and so on.
  • Mikie Joneshas quoted4 years ago
    That is, we may receive the answer before we even ask the question…
    In much the same way as we encountered when discussing time travel.
  • Mikie Joneshas quoted4 years ago
    The event corresponding to what you will do after you read this sentence does not exist. The future is unsettled and ripe with possibility.
  • Mikie Joneshas quoted4 years ago
    Time is independent of the contents of the universe.
  • Mikie Joneshas quoted4 years ago
    1999, the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colorado (US) started using an atomic clock known as the NIST F-1 to define the second.
  • b5034040018has quoted5 years ago
    sorry state, for I do not even know what I do not know!”.
  • 9i329382739213u81has quoted6 years ago
    such as whether the past and future are real, whether time travel is possible, and the explanation of the direction of time
  • lolhas quoted8 years ago
    IS THE CORRECT CONCLUSION THAT TIME DOESN’T EXIST? OR IS IT ONLY THAT TIME AS WE MIGHT WANT TO UNDERSTAND IT DOESN’T EXIST?
  • lolhas quoted8 years ago
    Finally, there are those like the English physicist Julian Barbour (b. 1937) who think that this theory helps spell the end for time. He believes that the formalism is telling us something deep – namely, that time doesn’t exist
  • lolhas quoted8 years ago
    QUANTUM GRAVITY IS THE NAME GIVEN TO THE THEORY… …THAT WILL RECONCILE THIS CONFLICT ALTHOUGH NO SUCH THEORY CURRENTLY EXISTS, THERE ARE A FEW MORE OR LESS DEVELOPED RESEARCH PROGRAMMES
    Two major approaches are superstring theory and canonical quantum gravity. We cannot explain the details here, but we can sketch the problem known as the “problem of time” that plagues the standard, or “canonical”
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)