THERE is a reason we say time goes by: it seems to flow. No matter how still we stand in space, we move inexorably through time, dragged as if in a current. As we do, events steadily pass from the future, via the present, to the past.
Isaac Newton saw this as a fundamental truth. 鈥淎ll motions may be accelerated and retarded, but the flowing of absolute time is not liable to any change,鈥 he wrote.
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So how does time flow, and why always in the same direction? Many physicists will tell you that鈥檚 a silly question. 鈥淭he idea that time can in some meaningful sense be said to flow, it鈥檚 just a complete non-starter,鈥 says , a philosopher at the University of Cambridge.
For time to flow, it must do so at some speed. But speed is measured as a change over time. So how fast does time flow? , a cosmologist from the University of Cape Town, South Africa, has an answer: 鈥淥ne second per second.鈥 Price says that鈥檚 meaningless. Even if time were standing still, it could be said that for every second that passes, one second passes. Indeed, if that鈥檚 a measure of flow, we could say that space flows: it passes at one metre per metre.
Ellis is up against one of the most successful theories in physics: special relativity. It revealed that there鈥檚 no such thing as objective simultaneity. Although you might have seen three things happen in a particular order 鈥 A, then B, then C 鈥 someone moving at a different velocity could have seen it a different way 鈥 C, then B, then A. In other words, without simultaneity there is no way of specifying what things happened 鈥渘ow鈥. And if not 鈥渘ow鈥, what is moving through time?
Rescuing an objective 鈥渘ow鈥 is a daunting task. But of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Waterloo, Canada, has given it a go by tweaking relativity. He argues that we can rewrite physics in a way that includes 鈥渘ow鈥 if we sacrifice some of our objective notions of space.
Most physicists aren鈥檛 having it. The general consensus is that time is more or less just like space 鈥 an immutable dimension, stretched out through a four-dimensional 鈥渂lock universe鈥.
鈥淓very moment in that universe has a past, present and future,鈥 says Sean Carroll from the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. 鈥淎 person is described as a history of moments, and those moments all have a feeling that they鈥檙e moving from the past to the future.鈥
That doesn鈥檛 answer the question so much as shift it. If time does not flow, what makes us think it does?
Read more: 鈥10 mysteries that physics can鈥檛 answer鈥 yet鈥
This article appeared in print under the headline 鈥淲hy do we move forwards in time?鈥
