Reclusland

December 10, 2009

- And my head just exploded -

New Model of the Universe Says Past Crystallizes out of the Future

  • The standard spacetime diagrams used in relativity accord no special status to the past, the present or the future. That’s because they assume that everything evolves from time-reversible local physics.
  • it is possible represent such a universe using a kind of spacetime diagram in which space and time merge into a single entity. “The universe just is: a fixed spacetime block,”say Ellis and Rothman. In this view, no instant has any special status: “All past and future times are equally present, and the present “now” is just one of an infinite number.”
  • Ellis and Rothman introduce a significant new type of block universe. They say the character of the block changes dramatically when quantum mechanics is thrown into the mix. All of a sudden, the past and the future take on entirely different characteristics. The future is dominated by the weird laws of quantum mechanics in which objects can exist in two places at the same time and particles can be so deeply linked that they share the same existence. By contrast, the past is dominated by the unflinching certainty of classical mechanics.
  • What’s interesting is that the transition between these states takes place largely in the present. It’s almost as if the past crystallizes out of the future, in the instant we call the present.
  • They point out, for example, that this crystallization process doesn’t take place entirely in the present. In quantum mechanics the past can sometimes be delayed, for example in delayed choice experiments. This means the structure of the transition from future to past is more complex than a cursory thought might suggest.
  • Ellis and Rothman suggest that their model provides a straightforward solution to the problem of the origin of the arrow of time. “The arrow of time arises simply because the future does not yet exist,” they say.

Granted, the article ends with:  That’s a thought-provoking but ultimately unconvincing model in its current form. But it’ll be interesting to see whether Ellis and Rothman can conjure a little more substance from the idea. What it needs, of course, are some testable predictions, things that cosmologists usually spend little time worrying about. Don’t hold your breath.

So maybe nothing to get too excited about, but the picture that paints is beautiful.  Even if nothing else, this provides an excellent metaphor for how karma works, and of how the mind moves through time.

via ledgergermane

ramblings
  1. Tathagata Zen teaching declares that the Dharmakaya, perfect complete unity, is never fixed. It is always spontaneously dividing itself and reuniting to realize a new Dharmakaya.

    The Dharmakaya divides itself into two primal activities, Tathagata and Tathaagata, or expansion and contraction, which gives rise to the three worlds of past, present and future. Self, world, space and time – everything – arise from the Dharmakaya dividing itself and everything returns to the Dharmakaya as expansion and contraction reunite. The aim of Tathagata Zen practice is to manifest our true nature, emptiness or zero, and realize dharma activity as our true self. This is the practice of realizing true love.

    Comment by Ian — January 28, 2010 @ 1:56 pm


  2. In the teaching of Tathagata Zen, the embryo of self arises when the Dharmakaya, the dharma body that is emptiness, divides itself. This division within the Dharmakaya brings about a new situation with three distinct aspects: incomplete expanding activity, incomplete contracting activity, and the union of equal minuscule amounts of both expansion and contraction that is incomplete emptiness. In Tathagata Zen teaching incomplete expanding activity is subject or past, incomplete contracting activity is object or future, and the union of expanding and contracting is space or present. This space is the embryo from which consciousness develops.

    Comment by Ian — January 28, 2010 @ 1:57 pm



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