Try this experiment: put a bunch of steel ball bearings (representing particles) in a box, shake the box and record a video of the balls moving randomly in all directions. Now, call two friends to your house. Play the video you recorded normally (forwards) to one friend and play the video in reverse (backwards) to the other friend. Ask both of them this question: Was the video played forwards/backwards? They won't be able to answer this question. — Agent Smith
Rather, from our perspective, we are moving forward while able only to look backward.Time does move backwards; or rather we move backwards through time. You can tell because we can see where we've been, but not where we're going. — unenlightened
we are riding in the back of a pickup truck, trying to guess where we are going by looking behind.Eyes in the back of your head is it? — unenlightened
There is a clear direction of time in a box full of moving steel balls. Perhaps you can hide it by continuing to add energy to the box, but the minute you stop the balls will all fall to the bottom. — T Clark
Why don't gas molecules behave like steel balls, settle at the bottom of their containers? — Agent Smith
Gas molecules are bound together much more weakly than solid molecules. They bounce quickly around inside any container - off the walls and each other. Temperature is a measure of the molecules' average kinetic energy. The warmer it is, the faster they move. Molecules are also affected by the force of gravity, but I guess the energy associated with gravity is much smaller than the heat energy. — T Clark
You're wrong. Please don't go spreading your ignorance — T Clark
What I (think) I know: Entropy gives time direction. The rule looks to be rather simple: If you're told the entropy is x at time T1, y at time T2 and y > x, then T2 is the future and T1 is the past — Agent Smith
Yes, my beloved! — EugeneW
"At or in?" I give not a fig. "on", why not? — unenlightened
You can tell because we can see where we've been, but not where we're going. — unenlightened
I am simple minded; I define 'forwards' as the way I am facing, my eyes being at, in, or on my face. I cannot see where I am going in time, but only where I have come from. Therefore the future is behind me and the past in front of me, and I progress backwards. "At or in?" I give not a fig. "on", why not? — unenlightened
Again, probability has nothing to do with it. It explains why time goes forward given initial conditions. If a flipped coin lands 10 000 000 times on the floor with heads up, and 2 times on tails, is the reason it lands on heads so often that it has a higher chance? No. The reason is the die itself. Likewise for time. The basic question is why the begin state of the universe is not situated at its end with all motion reversed. — EugeneW
Yes yes and yes again. The state of gas corpuscules being together in one corner of a container can be realized in way much less ways than them being all over it. That's no issue. The issue is why all motions of particles have the direction they have (which turns out to be compatible with the chances). Why don't they have the opposite velocities, so they meat in a corner? — EugeneW
Nobody took this bait.C theory, which rejects temporal directionality. — Kuro
Second law of TD in time-reversed universe:
All closed physical systems evolve towards lower entropy (with local patches evolving to higher entropy, but these don't constitute time reversion). — EugeneW
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