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by adrianratnapala
3319 days ago
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I am going to leave Barbour aside here, because I don't fully understand what his stance is. But if Maudlin is simply arguing that there is a fundamental time asymmetry in physics, then he his hardly arguing about the reality of time. But I understood him as disagreeing, not just with Barbour, but with a whole lot of physicists (including me) who are "B-theorists" which is a horrible term that means you consider the whole history of the universe as the fundamental reality and see change as a thing observed by beings within it. But that doesn't mean I think physics, or the history of the universe are time symmetric. My own view is there is some fundamental (but not very well understood) time asymmetry in physics. Yet I am still a B-theorist. But the alternative called "A-theory" (which I think Maudlin believes) is that time, and change are more fundamental than physics, so the fundamental reality is "the state of the universe _now_" and the laws of physics tell us how it has changed and will change. A-theory is also perfectly cogent, but it is separate from time symmetry. The only link being: IF physics is time symmetric (which it isn't) THEN B-theory implies there is no fundamental difference between time directions, while A-theory still allows it. |
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My above analogy to the left/right issue is the example I use to introduce students to the A- vs. B-theory.
The A- vs. B-theory debate is, of course, complicated, and you point to one possible complication: can we separate the issue of temporal asymmetry from the issue of temporal change?
As I see it, the answer to this question is "No".
We can talk about how some physical object 'changes' its spatial properties as we move from one spatial slice to another. For instance, as we move from the pointy-end of a cone to its base, each circular slice of the cone 'changes': they keep getting bigger until you reach the base.
This use of 'change' is symmetrical. There's no preferred direction of 'change' here. It makes equal sense to speak of changes "from bigger circle-slices to smaller-circle slices" as it does the other way around.
But in the context of the temporal dimension, talk of 'change' is not symmetrical. It's fine to say "The President changed from Obama to Trump", but you can't say "The president changed from Trump to Obama".
The point of all this just is: the issue of whether (temporal) change is symmetrical is tied up with the issue of whether time itself is symmetrical. You can't have your cake and eat it too. There's either an objective temporal ordering of physical events from past to future (as A-theory posits) or there isn't (as B-theory posits). If you're a B-theorist, you have to say that "Trump came after Obama" is like saying "The cup is on the left".
This is not a refutation of B-theory. But it, I hope, makes clearer what the stakes are. And when those stakes are made clearer, B-theory, in my view, looks less attractive.