Why? The events exist eh?
Has anyone definitely answered the question yet? ie can causality operate independent of time (I think it can although its very counter intuitive).
Has anyone definitely answered the question yet? ie can causality operate independent of time..
Has anyone definitely answered the question yet? ie can causality operate independent of time (I think it can although its very counter intuitive). I apologize for not reading all the replies in their entirety.
Well, a beam of light from your perspective has had it's time stopped.
Yet the beam of light can still cause a photoelectric effect, or a sunburn, etc on another planet- 'causality' - so I'd say the answer is 'yes'.
Modified said:But can't be causally related, because they all have space-like separation. Of course, as others have pointed out, without time there are no events anyway.
The Man said:As by some of our current understanding that causal relationship ends sometime in the past. Does this mean that time ends?
I don't understand you. We know that time begin to exist a fraction of a nano second after the big bang. So before time zero there was no time. However this is where things get interesting in a first cause cosmological argument and is the reason for the question.
If everything that begins to exist has a cause for its existence that means that the universe had a 'cause' to allow it to begin to exist.
Ahhh' yes! The rub! The 'cause' (for the universe to begin to exist) according to deductive logic existed 'before' time was created in the big bang! So hence the question!)
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I don't understand you. We know that time begin to exist a fraction of a nano second after the big bang. So before time zero there was no time.
If there are no events independent of time how can a (the 'interior') black hole exist and effect the outside universe ie in quantum entanglement and other processes such as Bekenstein-Hawking radiation?
If one of a pair of virtual particle falls into the event horizon and the other escapes as per Hawking radiation the particle in the hole should be connected via quantum entanglement outside of the hole, correct?
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If there are no events independent of time how can a (the 'interior') black hole exist and effect the outside universe ie in quantum entanglement and other processes such as Bekenstein-Hawking radiation?
If one of a pair of virtual particle falls into the event horizon and the other escapes as per Hawking radiation the particle in the hole should be connected via quantum entanglement outside of the hole, correct?
I don't understand you. We know that time begin to exist a fraction of a nano second after the big bang.
So before time zero there was no time. However this is where things get interesting in a first cause cosmological argument and is the reason for the question.
If everything that begins to exist has a cause for its existence that means that the universe had a 'cause' to allow it to begin to exist.
Ahhh' yes! The rub! The 'cause' (for the universe to begin to exist) according to deductive logic existed 'before' time was created in the big bang! So hence the question!)
I don't understand you. We know that time begin to exist a fraction of a nano second after the big bang. So before time zero there was no time. However this is where things get interesting in a first cause cosmological argument and is the reason for the question.
If everything that begins to exist has a cause for its existence that means that the universe had a 'cause' to allow it to begin to exist.
Ahhh' yes! The rub! The 'cause' (for the universe to begin to exist) according to deductive logic existed 'before' time was created in the big bang! So hence the question!)
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The interior has a perfectly good time variable. That stuff about time stopping is wrong. Moreover, the interior of a black hole cannot and does not affect the outside.
That brings up a good point Sol, so the interior of the black hole is casually related to the exterior (stuff falling through the event horizon) but the exterior is not causally related to the interior (nothing escapes the event horizon). Would that be a fair statement based on our current understanding?
Yes I have to agree with you. The man (above) is confusing the concept (the arrow of time with time). The events exist with or without time. They could theoretically be accessed from an observer outside time. So I think that causality can and does exist independent of time. Remember what Kurt Gödel proved in conjunction with his walking buddy at Princeton (Albert Einstein), which was that time did not exist. If time doesn’t exist, we see that causality does everyday. I will include the book where I got the Gem about time from one of my heroes Kurt Gödel. it’s a fantastic small book, I would highly recommend it to anyone interested in such things.
That's the case in classical gravity.
The situation in quantum gravity is extremely subtle, but the best current understanding is that the region outside the horizon is actually causally complete - no information is ever lost into the hole, because before it crosses the horizon it is vaporized by Hawking radiation and eventually radiated away (just like the smoke and light from something burning).
If you would bother to read the thread, that point was extensively discussed. Even if time did begin at t=0 that does not imply that there was a first cause. All you have to do is pick the set t>0, rather than t>=0, and there is no first moment. One can pick a time variable - one which might be better suited to describing physics near the singularity - in which t=0 gets mapped to t=-infinity.