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"Time" for Scientific American to catch up with us

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pau

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"... time does not really flow .... it's apparent flow is a product of our 'surreptitiously putting into the river a witness of its course'. That is, the tendency to believe time flows is a result of forgetting to put ourselves and our connections to the world into the picture...Time may exist only by breaking the world into subsystems and looking at what ties them together. In this picture, physical time emerges by virtue of our thinking ourselves as separate from everything else."

(Of course, the author of this article - "Is Time An Illusion?" - in the current issue of Scientific American is named ... Craig Callender!)

Ditto for the concept of space. "I knew that wormhole was around here somewhere, I just forgot where it was!"
 

Unfortunately, this is only a portion of the article and they want you to pay for the rest of it. PM me if you're really interested in this.
 
Only ever, a ever changing very present moment. The illusion of going 'forward' in time and remembering 'back' is only the construction of the human brain and our perception. Like how our calendar now goes from left to right until it is done, the mayan calander (and many others) are in a circle, representing that there is no actual beginning or ending; we conceive that ^__^

If you have the full article, i'd like to read it and see what someone who devotes their time to time would have to say. I pretty much rely off of what ancient masters once shared.
 
Julian Barbour has written a great essay on the topic of time: The Nature of Time by Julian Barbour - QSpace Forums

There is also a somewhat campy video summary of his ideas at

Barbour seems a unique character in that he doesn't hold an academic appointment anywhere, but he is the real deal, as theoretical physicists go, and his ideas trace back through Dirac's work in the 50's, the Wheeler-DeWitt equation, and Machian principles. His ideas are also as weird as any spice journeys I have ever had :)
 
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