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Does Time Really Pass? Simon Prosser University of St Andrews University of Durham Institute of Advanced Study Public lecture, 20 th November 2012
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Does Time Really Pass? Simon Prosser University of St Andrews University of Durham Institute of Advanced Study Public lecture, 20 th November 2012 T
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Does Time Really Pass? Simon Prosser University of St Andrews University of Durham Institute of Advanced Study Public lecture, 20 th November 2012
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Does Time Really Pass? Simon Prosser University of St Andrews University of Durham Institute of Advanced Study Public lecture, 20 th November 2012
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Near past Distant past Present Near future Distant future A-series t5t5 t4t4 t3t3 t2t2 t1t1 t 3 is earlier than t 4 and t 5 but later than t 1 and t 2, etc. This is true at all times B-series John McTaggart’s (1908) A-series and B-series 5
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Near past Distant past Present Near future Distant future A-series The A-theory of Time The A-theory of Time: Time is best represented by the A-series Time passes. There is a metaphysical asymmetry between the present and other times. The ‘Common sense’ view. 6
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t5t5 t4t4 t3t3 t2t2 t1t1 t 3 is earlier than t 4 and t 5 but later than t 1 and t 2, etc. This is true at all times B-series The B-theory of Time The B-theory of Time: Time is best represented by the B-series Times are ordered, but there is no metaphysical asymmetry between the present and any other time; there is no objective ‘now’. Time does not pass. 7
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= existing events = non-existing past or future events = the objective present ‘Moving spotlight’ A-theory ‘Growing Block’ A-theory Presentism (A-theory) B-theory The Ontology of the A and B Theories 8
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Four arguments against the passage of time 1.McTaggart’s paradox 1.The rate at which time passes 2.Einstein’s Theory of Relativity 1.The impossibility of experiencing the passage of time 9
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Four arguments against the passage of time 1.McTaggart’s paradox 1.The rate at which time passes 2.Einstein’s Theory of Relativity 1.The impossibility of experiencing the passage of time 10
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1. McTaggart’s paradox o McTaggart (1908, 1921) held that the A-series leads to contradiction because if time passes then every event is past AND present AND future o He held that attempts to remove the contradiction by saying, for example, that the event was future, is now present, and will be past, fail because a new contradiction appears at the second-order level (e.g. the event must be future-future, present-present and past-past). o In recent years, however, this argument has increasingly been found wanting 11
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Four arguments against the passage of time 1.McTaggart’s paradox 1.The rate at which time passes 2.Einstein’s Theory of Relativity 1.The impossibility of experiencing the passage of time 12
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2. The rate at which time passes o If time passes, how quickly does it pass? o Standard answer: one second per second! o But can we make sense of a rate of one second per second? 13
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Four arguments against the passage of time 1.McTaggart’s paradox 1.The rate at which time passes 2.Einstein’s Theory of Relativity 1.The impossibility of experiencing the passage of time 14
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3. Einstein’s Theory of Relativity o If there is an objective present time then there should be a single, objective fact about whether the two rings are simultaneous o But according to relativity theory, if the rings are simultaneous for an observer at rest with respect to the bells then the rings will not be simultaneous for a observer moving as shown o Is there some privileged frame of reference that determines which events are present? 15
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Four arguments against the passage of time 1.McTaggart’s paradox 1.The rate at which time passes 2.Einstein’s Theory of Relativity 1.The impossibility of experiencing the passage of time 16
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Could we build a device that detects the passage of time? AB PASSAGE DETECTOR TM 17 ✗ ?
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Why no physical device can detect the passage of time Near past Distant past Present Near future Distant future A-series t5t5 t4t4 t3t3 t2t2 t1t1 t 3 is earlier than t 4 and t 5 but later than t 1 and t 2, etc. This is true at all times B-series o Physics predicts the same series of events regardless of whether the A-theory or the B-theory is true. o So the detector would behave in the same way regardless of which theory was true. 18
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Why do we believe that time passes? … we are immediately and poignantly involved in the jerk and whoosh of process, the felt flow of one moment into the next (D. C. Williams, 1951) 19
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Eddington on experiencing temporal passage … consciousness, looking out through a private door, can learn by direct insight an underlying character of the world which physical measurements do not betray. (Sir Arthur Eddington, The Nature of the Physical World (1928: 91) 20
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The impossibility of experiencing the passage of time o So, the nature of experience gives us no reason to believe that time passes o However this might seem compatible with the claim that if time passes we can experience it passing o I shall now argue that even if time did pass, we could not experience it passing o Then, finally, I shall argue that it follows that time does not pass 21
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Experiences map uniquely to worldly features E1E1 E4E4 E3E3 E2E2 E5E5 Experiences 22
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o Suppose there were H-theorists, who believed that headaches were perceptions of H-properties instantiated by nearby clouds. They knew nothing else about H-properties. o Can an H-theorist accept that headaches have nothing to do with H-properties, but still claim that clouds have H-properties? o No: they have no understanding of which properties H- properties are supposed to be. o The obvious conclusion should be that there is no such thing as an H-property. Time does not pass 23
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Summary o Our first three arguments - from McTaggart’s paradox, the rate of time’s passage, and Einstein’s theory of relativity – threaten the claim that time passes, but perhaps they are not conclusive o However our experiences give us no reason to believe that time passes o Even if time did pass, none of our experiences could really be experiences of time passing o Consequently we don’t even know what it would be for time to pass o The only reasonable conclusion to draw is that there is no such phenomenon as the passage of time, and the B-theory is correct. 24
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