One of the biggest mysteries left to man.
What is it?
Physics should be time symmetric. Relativity implies all of the universe should exist as one enormous block, past present and future already fixed and complete.
Why do we experience it as moving down a path with a 'now'? Why is there an arrow to causality?
For a while I pondered the possibility that there's simply a 'now', a stage, no past or future to reach - just one instant in which the universe exists, coupled to the past and future only inasmuch as the laws of physics dictate how the layout of the stage will change. But relativity requires time to be accessible in a cross-sliced fashion.
This question is critical because it ties into the mystery of consciousness. We do not yet understand why we experience experience the way we do, moment to moment. If we were able to resolve the arrow of time and understand why the now is the now, we might have a better idea. If the mind is a physical system, and the mind experiences time, there must be a physical reason for time.
Ideas?
First off, why must physics be time-symmetric, as redsniper noted? I mean, for the most part it
is, sure, but there is no objective reason why this should be the case. There are also at least two cases of physics not being time symmetric at all: thermodynamics and quantum mechanics. Entropy is an obvious one, but QM also is not time-symmetric. Rather, it follows CPT symmetry (if you simultaneously reverse time, charge,
and parity, you end up where you were). A less obvious example of time assymmetry is GR. If you time-reverse a black hole, you get a white hole, not another black hole.
Second, I'm not sure what you mean here by "relativity requires time to be accessible in a cross-sliced fashion." It also, to my mind, does not imply that past present and future are fixed and complete; what in the equations leads you to believe this to be so?
Third, why must there be a physical reason for time itself? Why not simply the
perception of time? Having the latter is an obvious benefit to the organism. I would argue that the mind is a physical system, and it gives us the experience of time because it was evolutionarily advantageous to do so. It chooses irreversible processes for what are again seemingly obvious reasons (this is where it gets a bit circular).
Just an aside, doesn't relativity also state that there also no real such thing as "now"? (Relativity of simultaneity)
No, it states that there is no concept of a
universal now. If there was no now at all, you couldn't talk about the time coordinate having any value in any frame whatever. Rather, what is happening "now" is frame-dependent, but "now" is not an obsolete concept.
Hmmm, can the anthropic principle be called upon here? Is it possible for life to exist in a universe where time flows backwards or has no preferential direction at all?
...is it even possible for such a universe to exist?!
¯\(°_o)/¯
What would "time running backwards" be? If you flip time around, in QM at least you flip the antimatter and matter states, so there's nothing necessarily special there. You don't really run into problems in GR, either (black holes become white holes, etc.). The Friedman equations look weird, but if the universe is either inhomogenous or non-isotropic, they don't apply anyway. Time having no particular direction is also possible (I think), though it involves changing how entropy works (e.g., ALL processes are now reversible, perpetual motion machines are possible, etc.), and all the wonderfully weird stuff you get out of GR if you invent negative matter and such would probably be possible as well. Well, QM would also be radically different, but I still think such a universe is at least conceptually possible.