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"Dear Dr. B: What do physicists mean when they say time doesn’t exist?"

36 Comments -

1 – 36 of 36
Blogger Phillip Helbig said...

What do you think of Julian Barbour's claim that time doesn't exist. (If he is wrong then, echoing Fermi (or was it von Neumann?), probably on a higher level.) Have you read anything by him?

4:43 AM, November 10, 2015

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Hi Phillip,

I haven't read anything by Julian, but I've met him many times and heard several of his lectures. I would say the same thing about his claim that "time doesn't exist" - it's an abuse of language. What he means is that fundamentally there is no time. Since he too must reproduce General Relativity, emergent time must still exist.

About his idea in general. It's either too much or too little I'd say. If you take away time and argue that our perception of time does not come about because moments are actually connected, but because at each moment it appears to us as if they were, then why not do away with space as well and go to full blown solipsism. What do you need a full universe for when Julian Barbor's brain at one moment of time will do?

It's good there are people willing to be so radical and to question everything. I just personally think that quantizing gravity doesn't necessitate it. Best,

B.

6:06 AM, November 10, 2015

Blogger John Salmond said...

on a (simplistic) tangent:

Some talking at fundamental cross-purposes in such discussions

Humans are capable of only the vaguest adumbration of reality as science knows it.

To take simplest things: We look at our neighbour and see brown hair; that colour is merely our labelling of a frequency of light; we touch their hand and it is solid: yet it is almost entirely empty space; we look at the sky and see a pattern that does not exist now and never did exist; some stars are seen where they were a handful of years ago, others where they were billions of years ago.

And once we start talking about deep issues like time . . .

We tiny fractions of the universe can only grasp the universe as science understands it by ceasing to be human, splitting from our usual selves.

Science can allow us to manipulate the deeper reality to some degree, and to understand in a shadowy way, but never more.

7:22 AM, November 10, 2015

Blogger Andrew Thomas said...

Julian Barbour's style of writing is so convoluted as to be almost unreadable.
The problem (well, one of the problems) I had with Lee Smolin's book is that he said some physicists believe time doesn't exist, which - as you say - is clearly misrepresenting their views. If you merely accept general relativity, you are saying time exists (as you say, it's just a coordinate). He didn't explain anything in detail, didn't explain the block universe model, and it left you wondering what he was actually arguing about. Really strange.

7:35 AM, November 10, 2015

Blogger Arun said...

General Relativity by itself gives no meaning to the present, but what about with Quantum Mechanics grafted onto it, with past, present and future measurements?

7:58 AM, November 10, 2015

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Arun,

I think George Ellis has been hitting on this drum, but I've never managed to make sense of his modified block universe. The measurement process isn't fundamental - it can't be because "detectors" aren't fundamental. The problem is that nobody knows how it 'emerges' (which I think, btw, is a totally under-investigated question). I think most physicists presently believe the measurement is yet another type of entropy increase. See, waving your hands and saying 'quantum mechanics' doesn't get you off the hook when you are asking which space-time slicing is the one to define the 'present' moment. The only way you can do this is to introduce a preferred slicing. Which leads to Lorentz-invariance violation, which leads to a problem. I don't see how to get around this. I'm a big fan of the block universe with all its eternal presence. Best,

B.

9:45 AM, November 10, 2015

Blogger Uncle Al said...

"But it is for all practical purposes impossible to set up dough so that a reverse-spinning mixer would separate the eggs from the flour." Maybe,

http://news.uci.edu/research/uci-fellow-chemists-find-a-way-to-unboil-eggs/
http://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-tech/australian-scientist-wins-ig-nobel-prize-for-uncooking-an-egg-20150918-gjpq12.html

"space-time, and its curvature is the origin of gravity." ECKS gravitation; spacetime torsion overall, Weitzenböck for a metric. Testable on a bench top in existing equipment. Chirality is a strong arrow of time,

Phys. Rev. D 88, 044024 (2013), arXiv:1307.2229, doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.88.044024
Nature 463 210 (2010), doi:10.1038/nature08680
Phys. Rev. D 71 057501 (2005)), doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.71.057501
Phys Rev Lett. 91(24) 247404 (2003), doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.91.247404
Chem. Phys. Lett. 173(5-6) 485 (1990), doi:10.1016/0009-2614(90)87240-R

Politics denies time. Infrastructure has always been, society is redefined at will, no future will be held accountable for finance.

10:21 AM, November 10, 2015

Blogger andrew said...

Isn't the big insight about time in special relativity, which carries over to general relativity, that the rate at which time flows in local and individual, rather than being a global dimension or coordinate? Or, to be more precise, that the arrow of time may be global, but the metric of time is not?

12:06 PM, November 10, 2015

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Andrew: Yes, it's what I mean when I wrote that time isn't uniquely defined.

12:20 PM, November 10, 2015

Blogger Noa Drake said...

Here's my take on it : There are (at least) 2 interpretations of time. We can't remember the future because it hasn't happened yet. We can remember the past because is has happened. That's how we experience time in an absolute way. Then there's time in Relativity. The most general description of time here is : Time is what clocks measure. Mixing those 2 notions of time leads to a pile of nonsense. Side note: A classic spring clock would not respond the same way an atom clock does, so time as measured in Relativity is a process not yet fully understood ( in spite of excellent mathematical descriptions). I think if understood those details, we would have an viable angle to construct a theory of quantum gravity. Greetings. Everything should be debatable, so shoot.

12:39 PM, November 10, 2015

Blogger Giotis said...

What about the Wheeler-DeWitt equation and the fact that time evolution is a Hamiltionian constraint(HΨ=0)? People often begin discussion regarding the "problem of time" by referring to this.

2:17 AM, November 11, 2015

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Giotis,

I was thinking that would be too technical. In my perspective this "problem of time" merely means, as in classical GR, that one has to pick a time coordinate by hand, or use one that is defined from the flow of some matter field. I don't really understand why this is a problem. Best,

B.

6:50 AM, November 11, 2015

Blogger William Wallace said...

I've always had a nagging thought that time emerges from, or is the same as, motion. This makes sense to my layman's mind, as it seems to fit well with the local nature of time and its relation to velocity. Not that I know what I am saying, but without time there can be no motion, and motion means there is a before and after, it would seem to me. My $0.02^(-100,000).

10:41 AM, November 11, 2015

Blogger Michael Musson said...

Can you explain more about the concept of time as it relates to quantum entanglement? If one particle of an entangled pair is distant, accelerating away, and in the neighborhood of a gravity well, isn't it hard to synchronize time between the two particles so that an "instantaneous" correlation between the particles makes any sense as a concept.

To my layman's understanding, time at the quantum level looks a lot like an absolute thing in contradiction to SR and the relativity of simultaneity.

11:33 AM, November 11, 2015

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Michael,

An excellent question! Speaking of an "instantaneous correlation" doesn't make sense. The particles are correlated, period. It is correct that it "looks like" a contradiction to SR. But it isn't. There isn't anything observable in this description that contradicts SR. Yes, some people don't like the "instantaneous" collapse, but it's just this: a disliking. There's no internal contradiction. George Musser has written an excellent book about this, that I can warmly recommend. Best,

B.

11:48 AM, November 11, 2015

Blogger Waterbergs said...

Slightly off topic, but George Musser has an article in SciAm on nonlocality (I presume to promote his book that you reviewed):

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-einstein-revealed-the-universe-s-strange-nonlocality/

He claims that objects fall "because Earth's mass warps time. The warping of space plays only a minor role in these cases"

Is this right?

12:33 PM, November 11, 2015

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Waterberg,

It's an extract from his book (which I mentioned above). I took the sentence you quote to mean that in the Newtonian limit it's only the tt-component of the metric that enters, so in that interpretation it's correct. Roughly speaking, the reason is that every contribution from a space-coordinate is suppressed by v/c which, for objects we deal with, is always << 1. Best,

B.

12:16 AM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Waterbergs said...

Thanks Sabine. Can you recommend a online resource that provides a good introduction to General Relativity for someone with a science background who isn't afraid of maths?

1:44 AM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Sean Carroll's lecture notes are a good start.

2:00 AM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Waterbergs said...

Thanks Sabine

2:35 AM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Paul said...

From what I can see of George Musser's book courtesy of Amazon.com it looks like it's mostly (or even all) psiontology. He says, "in the case of nonlocality, even the most die-hard skeptic accepts that something very weird is going on, something that forces us to go beyond our deepest-held notions of space and time." Really? So where does that leave the (neo-)Copenhagenist, the QBist or the Relationalist?

7:25 AM, November 12, 2015

OpenID Mike said...

Dear Sabine,
After thinking it over, I do wish to say I don't believe your attitude befits someone who very clearly wishes to be taken seriously. I am hoping sincerely that you might come around to agree with me.

I came to your blog last night from Motl's. He had used your name in an offhanded way to characterize something as easy to understand while also making a definitive statement about your intelligence.

Subsequently I read you entry regarding him and his disreputable behavior towards you, and it informed me.

And so it pained me to read this unfortunate entry. I don't know how Mr. Smolin could have personally offended you, but this is not the place to seek retribution, particularly as you know he will not respond to this type of nonsense. It further pains me that in his books which are exceedingly easy to understand and written in plain and proper English he makes exactly the same statement more or less that you make here in the last paragraph. Finally, the gross inappropriateness of this offhand statement of yours makes a joke that you are missing. I don’t want to spell it out because you will be offended, but It would be better if you did not force your reader to evaluate this condition.

Please consider removing the reference to Mr. Smolin altogether. As you suggested more or less in discussing Motl, it would be better to address a person's ideas after you have read them and are certain you understand them. I think you know what you were attempting here, perhaps it felt good at the time, but it is beneath anyone who is a scholar and a writer.

Should you decide to make the necessary correction, please also delete this comment. Thank you.
Mike Asher

9:25 AM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Mike,

I have honestly no clue what you are talking about. All that I am trying to say is: If you want to understand what Lee says, you should read his book, and not listen to me. If you found it "easy to understand," then I am curious to hear what you think he means with "time being real." If you think he means the same as I mean, then I think you misunderstood either me or him.

I assure you that Prof. Smolin has not personally offended me, and I am not "seeking retribution" on anything. If you though my comment was anything else than a humorous recommendation to buy-the-book, you misread it. Best,

B.

10:16 AM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Noa Drake said...

Hello Sabine,

In your explanations above you say : "In this view, every moment in time exists in some way."
Can you explain how this conclusion is reached, starting from the GR definition of time, where time is what clocks measure. We could indeed observe many clocks, each at for instance a different radius from the earth, and notice that they each will indicate a different time, according to gravitational time dilatation. "In some way" : could you clarify in what way you have intended this ?

Thank you,

Greetings

12:14 PM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Hi Noa,

I explained this several years ago here. Looking at this now, I'm not sure how comprehensible it is, but give it a try. If that doesn't help, I'll give it another go ;) Best,

B.

12:21 PM, November 12, 2015

Blogger John Merryman said...

Some thoughts on time;
We experience reality as flashes of cognition and so think of time as the point of the present moving from past to future events. Physics essentially codifies this by treating it as measures of duration, from one event to the next.
The basic reality though, is that it is a changing configuration creating and dissolving these events, such that they go future to past. To wit, tomorrow becomes yesterday because the earth turns, relative to the sun.
Duration then, is the state of the present, as these events come and go. What is measured is frequency and this makes time an effect of action, similar to temperature, which is an effect of masses of frequency and amplitude.
What creates the directionality of time is the inertia of action. It is a physical fact that the earth turns one way and not the other. Time is not simply a scalar measure, but an effect.
So causality yields determination, not the other way around, as events are first in the present, then in the past. The input into any event only fully arrives with its occurrence and there is no view outside of space and time to recognize it prior to that. So if input cannot be known, then neither can output.
Alan Watts used the example of a boat and its wake to describe this relationship between the present and the past, in that the boat creates the wake, not the wake directing the boat.
The illusion of determinism comes from the inertia of energy, but this also means the energy is conserved as the present moment and so there is none to physically manifest prior or succeeding moments. So it is actually the present moment that is constantly reconfiguring prior formations and so adapting the prior formations to current frames, much as memory constantly edits itself. Even as they occur, events are recognized as subjective, so receding into the past doesn't make them objective. Time then is more a loop, of a tapestry being woven of strands pulled from what had been woven.
We equate temporal sequence with causality, but it is an effect, not the basis of that process. Yesterday didn't cause today, rather the sun shining on a spinning planet created this effect of days.
The reason clocks can run at different rates and still remain in the same present is that they are separate actions. A faster clock uses energy quicker and so will recede into the past faster. The tortoise is still plodding along, long after the hare has died. As the twin in the faster frame ages quicker.
So time is emergent at the level of measurable change, just as temperature is emergent at the level of measurable activity.

12:37 PM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Phillip Helbig said...

"buy-the-book"

A real rarity: too many hyphens!

12:56 PM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Uncle Al said...

@Mike The past 45 years of non-classical gravitation summed are non-empirical - assuming the Equivalence Principle (Einstein's elevators). Given Newton's assumptions, where is GR, QM, and stat mech? Derivation cannot detect weak postulates. Crackpot Bolyai said a triangle's three interior angles can sum to other than Euclidean 180 degrees, like 300+ degrees,

71.295556 -156.766389 Barrow, AK
-1.469167 -78.817500 Mt. Chimborazo, Ecuador
3.133333, 101.683333 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

http://mathforum.org/library/drmath/view/65316.html
http://www8.nau.edu/cvm/latlongdist.html
Calculate it exactly
http://thewinnower.s3.amazonaws.com/papers/95/v1/sources/image004.png
The EP might fall to test mass geometry not composition.

12:57 PM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Noa Drake said...

Ok, thank you.

1:13 PM, November 12, 2015

Blogger Noa Drake said...

Ok Sabine, i've read your expose, it is very informative and didactic, thank you.
The following is rather a long paragraph, but i hope you will take the time to look into it.
I'm trying to get a grasp of this 'time' by hypothetically putting myself at a spot outside of the universe, to get an understanding as a non-participant so to speak. Taking the phylosophical starting view that everything is made of 'stuff', in the broadest sense of the word, visible matter, the vacuum, dark matter, ...litterally everything.
Ok, what i see then is that any clock rate and any experience of time is emerging from interaction of this 'stuff', even without specifying what 'interaction' and 'stuff' would entail precisely.
This results in a very dry and unspectacular understandi g of 'time', meaning that it is just not out there to be found anywhere. Past, present, future, ticking rates, all of it has its origin from 'stuff interacting'.
The universe seen as 'a bucket' full of hydrodynamical processes, just stuff, and it moves, be it in highly specific ways and according to highly specific laws.
This helicopter visions pulls the plug on abstract concepts and puts your feed firmly on the ground. At least , this is a view i wanted to share in response to a.o. the Block Universe concept and the Presentism you discussed in that post. Demystification has always been an important role for science throughout the course of history, no ? Interpreting SR and GR towards explanations that objectify the meaning of what sits behind the equations in this case.
Would you agree with such a view, or ?
Greetings, Noa

2:09 PM, November 12, 2015

Blogger George Musser said...


@Paul: Copenhagenists and QBists do implicitly make dramatic claims about spacetime, I argue in the book. This is tricky to pick apart because proponents argue for these interpretations by poking holes in other interpretations, as opposed to offering a positive account of quantum correlations. But to the extent I can fill in what these interpretations are saying about correlations, they admit to a failure of spatiotemporal separability. By relationalism, I presume you are referring to Carlo Rovelli's idea that reality is observer-dependent. That is very similar to (arguably, equivalent to) the Everettian interpretation, which also entails nonseparability of states. I give extensive references in my endnotes. If a defender of these interpretations disagrees with my reading, I think they would do everyone a great service by spelling out exactly how they think the correlations occur.

@Sabine: "Saying that something isn’t real because it’s emergent is a meaningless abuse of terminology. It’s like saying the forest doesn’t exist because it’s made of trees." Free will, perhaps? ;-)

3:19 PM, November 14, 2015

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

George,

I have always made it clear that it's perfectly fine by me to say that free will is emergent - a forest made of trees. The problem is that people want it to be a forest that isn't made of trees, and last time I looked you were one of these "people". I somehow lost track of this, sorry. I will come back to it eventually... Best,

B.

2:25 AM, November 15, 2015

Blogger Paul said...

@George

Well I haven't read your book so I've no idea what your argument is but it's implausible to me that one exists that would support your claim. Copenhagists and QBists don't only argue for their interpretations by poking holes in other interpretations. Once you've interpreted QT as, fundamentally, the application of (non-commutative, 'subjective') probability theory to physics, it just doesn't make sense to demand the kind of positive account of correlations - possibly involving dramatic revisions to our understanding of spacetime - which it does make sense to demand of psi-ontic interpretations.

Rovelli's idea is compatible with MWI/EQM rather than equivalent to it.

11:12 AM, November 15, 2015

Blogger Evan Thomas said...

Slight tangent to your post. Well, I guess it's coming at the nature of time from a different direction.

Specifically, I'm thinking of Aharonov's and Tollaksen's Time Symmetric Quantum Mechanics (TSQM). I've been following this theory for a little over 10 years now. At first, it didn't seem very popular. But, it seems like lately it's gaining some ground, with more folks considering that possibility reality might just consist of this ever-so-subtle type of retrocausality found in TSQM.

Anyhow, seems like a whole 'nother spin on the question "what is the nature of time". Just curious what you make of their ideas?

For some reason, I can't help but feel TSQM and "standard" QM might be analogous to Lagrangian/Hamiltonian and Infinitesimal methods under Newtonian physics. Mathematically, you get all the same predictions from both formulations (just like with TSQM and "standard" QM). But, one, or the other, is more useful in certain areas for problem solving, or for providing better, different insights on reality (once again, just like with TSQM and "standard" QM). But, reality is apparently rich enough to take on the appearances given by both points of view.

I can't help but think that time (w/e it is) might ultimately be rich enough such that it takes on the linear appearance under "standard" QM, as well as the "bi-linear" appearance under TSQM. Perhaps the next big theory will tell us why?

12:24 PM, December 07, 2016

Blogger Henry Norman said...

Sabine: You say that "time is real in a well-defined way" -- So, what is that definition of time that you mention? All I can find is, "Time in physics is defined by its measurement: time is what a clock reads." (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_in_physics) Can you help me out, please?

10:55 PM, December 15, 2016

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Time is a coordinate of a differentiable space-time manifold with Lorentzian signature. It's the one with the odd signature out, depending on convention that's either plus or minus. That's the definition. You can't define time as the thing that a clock reads because for that you'd first have to define what a clock is. Once you introduce matter, you can define a clock and you'll find that (in suitable approximations) clocks read time. In both cases there are infinitely many parameterizations of time.

12:53 AM, December 16, 2016

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