This book is an attempt to get to the bottom of an acute and
perennial tension between our best scientific pictures of the
fundamental physical structure of the world and our everyday
empirical experience of it. The trouble is about the direction of
time. The situation (very briefly) is that it is a consequence of
almost every one of those fundamental scientific pictures--and that
it is at the same time radically at odds with our common
sense--that whatever can happen can just as naturally happen
backwards.
Albert provides an unprecedentedly clear, lively, and systematic
new account--in the context of a Newtonian-Mechanical picture of
the world--of the ultimate origins of the statistical regularities
we see around us, of the temporal irreversibility of the Second Law
of Thermodynamics, of the asymmetries in our epistemic access to
the past and the future, and of our conviction that by acting now
we can affect the future but not the past. Then, in the final
section of the book, he generalizes the Newtonian picture to the
quantum-mechanical case and (most interestingly) suggests a very
deep potential connection between the problem of the direction of
time and the quantum-mechanical measurement problem.
The book aims to be both an original contribution to the
present scientific and philosophical understanding of these matters
at the most advanced level, and something in the nature of an
elementary textbook on the subject accessible to interested
high-school students.
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