So again: Why aren't all processes moving exactly opposite to their present direction? — EugeneW
Heat and light radiate outwards — universeness
We all know it. Time is unidirectional. — EugeneW
Yes. But... Why they don't radiate inwards? Why isn't the beginning of time situated at the end? I think I'm drifting off from reality a bit now Stephen, but still... I asked this on a physics site, but the question was closed for being a duplicate of a question about the Loschmidt paradox I didn't agree though — EugeneW
Can your personal conception of the attributes of God be reversed? — universeness
Why didn't he arrange it to begin at infinity, ending at the singularity? — EugeneW
Others like myself prefer to go with the idea that inflation/expansion is not 'into' anything as it is everything — universeness
Why isn't the beginning of time situated at the end? — EugeneW
So using the second law of thermodynamics to explain why this won't happen is of no use. — EugeneW
Time moves the direction it does because there is just one way an egg broken on the floor could regather into an egg but there are a billion gazillion trumpillion ways it could just sit there in a yellow puddle. — T Clark
I understand the arrow of time, but I don't understand why the arrow doesn't point from future to past. — EugeneW
But why doesn't it and all around it move backwards. Why isn't the law that entropy decreases? — EugeneW
But you could just as well argue the other way round. If entropy only decreased, it would be very unlikely for time to go forwards. — EugeneW
Was the video played forwards/backwards? They won't be able to answer this question. Hmmmmm. :chin: — Agent Smith
Encopresis! — Agent Smith
I'm not sure if we'd not notice it. Forces stay the same if all particles and processes reverse direction. — EugeneW
we were all symmetrical spheres, it would be impossible to tell whether time is running forwards/backwards i.e. time would lack a direction — Agent Smith
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