But before you can conceive of a phase space, you have to conceive of a theory that gives rise to that phase space. The phase space is just a slice of the theory; you need to lay out the theory first. — SophistiCat
This is exactly what I was refuting in the quoted bit. I suspect maybe the word “phase” is leading you to this conclusion, because a phase implies a temporal process, which is why I also named the synonymous term “configuration space” which has no such connotations. — Pfhorrest
Hmmm... let's put this to the test. Have you seen Primer (link: IMDb)?I love any films that deal with the topic. — Benj96
Yes-ish maybe. It's curved; it can go in various directions, some of which reach ends. Oddly these ends might further extend in some cases indefinitely into other universes. It's quite interesting...Is it linear or cyclical?
No idea.Discrete or continuous?
The answers "yes" and "no" are both correct depending on what the question is really asking.Does it actually exist outside our conscious awareness of passing events?
The answers "no" and "mu" are both correct depending on what the question is really asking.Are all "nows" the same?
Depends on the event; and depending on the event, there may not be a beginning or end to it.When is the end or beginning of an event?
Because even with instruments postdiction is much easier than prediction. This is the same as the entropy answer others have given with a slight bent towards perspective.Why does it seem to have a direction?
To me this seems too speculative to have an answer.What would we be able to know about the world if we had no concept of time?
Either we would use obvious non-standard units or too speculative to have an answer.Or if we had no standardised unit of time?
There empirically appears to be a symmetry of change regarding fundamental processes; said symmetry allows the notion of "rate of change" to be meaningful as a metric of time. The symmetry is sufficiently strong that processes appear to evolve nearly identically with respect to shifts in time; time translation symmetry per Noether's Theorem allows us to derive a particular kind of value we call "energy" as a conserved quantity.What is the relationship between time, energy, rate and change?
One test I use for definitions is: Does the definition point unambiguously to the word being defined? — A Seagull
The future already exists, and the past exists in the future. The present obviously influences the future, but the past has a future as well. — neonspectraltoast
The perception of past events has some component that reaches across time and space and can and does influence past events. The events themselves don't change, but you, in the present, always influenced them in the way that you did. — neonspectraltoast
Time is a parameter of physical processes. It is discrete and unidirectional. — Vladimir Krymchakov
Not to voice agreement or disagreement, but one of the difficulties of Planck scale is that it's a precise scale... it's hard to square that against Lorentz transforms. If there's something discrete about time, it seems it should also be related to something discrete about space. (Then, there's also singularity concerns, such as what this scale's meaning is at horizons).Time may seem discrete because we are unable to measure time duration below the Planck scale. — jgill
Is a concern about whether time is discrete or continuous a truly substantive issue, or is it akin to other debatable subjects that have little relevance to the physical world, like the existence or non-existence of irrational numbers? — jgill
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