Time
One can say that one event occurs after another event. Furthermore one can
measure how much one event occurs after another. The answer to how much is
the amount of time between the those two events. One way of defining the
idea of 'after' is based on the assumption of causality. The work humanity
has done to increasingly understand the nature and measurement of time,
through the work of making and improving calendars and clocks, has been a
major engine of scientific discovery.
The standard unit for time is the SI second, from which larger units are
defined like the minute, hour, day, week, month, year, decade, and century.
Time can be measured, just like other physical dimensions. Measuring devices
for time are clocks. Very accurate clocks are often called chronometers. The
best available clocks are atomic clocks.
There are several continuous time scales in current use: Universal Time,
International Atomic Time (TAI), which is the basis for other time scales,
Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), which is the standard for civil time,
Terrestrial Time (TT), etc. Mankind has invented calendars to track the
passages of days, weeks, months, and years.
Time in engineering and applied physics
In physics, time is defined as the distance between events along the fourth
axis of the spacetime manifold. Special relativity showed that time cannot
be understood except as part of spacetime, a combination of space and time.
The distance between events now depends on the relative speed of the
observers of the events. General relativity further changed the notion of
time by introducing the idea of curved spacetime. An important unit of time
in theoretical physics is the Planck time.
Time in philosophy and theoretical physics
Important questions in the philosophy of time include: Is time absolute or
merely relational? Is time without change conceptually impossible or is
there more to the idea? Does time "pass" or are the ideas of past, present
and future entirely subjective, descriptions only of our deception by the senses?
Zeno's paradoxes fundamentally challenged the ancient conception of time,
and thereby helped motivate the development of the calculus. A point of
contention between Newton and Leibniz concerned the question of absolute
time: the former believed time was, like space, a container for events,
while the latter believed time was, like space, a conceptual apparatus
describing the interrelations between events. McTaggart believed, rather
eccentrically and on the basis of a very shaky argument, that time and
change are illusions. Parmenides (of whom Zeno was a follower) held a
similar belief based on a similarly shaky, but rather more interesting
argument.
Einstein's theory of relativity linked time and space into spacetime in a
way that also had philosophical consequences, making the idea of block time
more credible, and thus affecting ideas of free will and causality.
The engineer J. W. Dunne developed a theory of time whereby he considered
our perception of time like notes being played on piano. Having had a number
of prescient dreams, he monitored his dreams and found that they generally
included as many past as future events. From this he concluded that in
dreams we escape linear time. He published his ideas in An Experiment with
Time in 1927 and followed this with other books.
Perception of time
One may perceive time to go fast ("time flies"), meaning that a duration
seems less than it is;
this may be considered an advantage:
* in the case of something of fixed duration which is relatively
unpleasant, which may be e.g.:
o work (perhaps not as pleasant as leisure time, but done for the
money)
o travel (if not done for its own sake, but to get somewhere)
o waiting, boredom
it may be considered a disadvantage:
* in the case of something of fixed duration which is relatively
pleasant, which may be e.g.:
o leisure time, holidays
(on the other hand, that the time has flown is considered a sign that
it has been enjoyable)
* if one has a lot to do
* on a larger time scale, "getting old quickly"
Time also seems to go fast when sleeping, some of the above applies, e.g. it
may be an advantage to sleep as train or car passenger, and sleep long in
the case of boredom, while it may be wasteful to sleep long on holidays.
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