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-   -   Time Question (http://archives1.twoplustwo.com/showthread.php?t=467286)

Sciolist 08-02-2007 06:51 AM

Time Question
 
Does anyone have any links talking about what time is for a non-technical reader? I just read a discover magazine article:

http://discovermagazine.com/2007/jun/in-no-time

And I'd like to know more. I am thinking it's reasonable that time doesn't exist in the same way that we think about it, just as most things don't. I am having a lot of trouble thinking of time not being a fundamental process though, as it seems to be so pervasive for us. I remember reading some articles about reverse causality a while ago though, and need to read more things like this to help form a proper opinion on time.

Metric 08-02-2007 09:13 AM

Re: Time Question
 
I wrote an intro to this here:

http://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/sh...4251&page=

It is a bit mathy, but hopefully gives you a taste of the difference the historically understood "time as a parameter in the Schrodinger equation" and "time in the Wheeler-DeWitt equation", which was mentioned in the article you cite.

Also -- that guy Carlo Rovelli who was referenced in that article is my hero.

Sciolist 08-02-2007 09:52 AM

Re: Time Question
 
[ QUOTE ]
I wrote an intro to this here:

http://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/sh...4251&page=

It is a bit mathy, but hopefully gives you a taste of the difference the historically understood "time as a parameter in the Schrodinger equation" and "time in the Wheeler-DeWitt equation", which was mentioned in the article you cite.

Also -- that guy Carlo Rovelli who was referenced in that article is my hero.

[/ QUOTE ]
Sorry, afraid you lost me at covariant :]

How wikipedia defines it in the first paragraph and the way you use it don't seem to mesh too well for me. Perhaps it'd make more sense if I understood past the first paragraph of the wikipedia entry


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