The 2nd Law of Thermodynamics and the "dispersion" rule that drives time forward. The Past Hypothesis.
OPEN CONTENT →If fundamental laws of physics are bidirectional, why can't we go back? Poincaré Recurrence.
OPEN CONTENT →Block Universe theory, mental frame rate, and the illusion of perceived time.
OPEN CONTENT →Light Speed as the universe's bandwidth limit and the unreachable Cosmic Horizon.
OPEN CONTENT →A future observation altering an event in the database from billions of years ago.
OPEN CONTENT →"If time is a pliable illusion, can we bend its rules to tamper with our own past?"
PROCEED TO CHAPTER 6: PARADOXES →Why do we all age, yet none of us grow younger? Why do the pieces of a broken egg not rise from the floor and re-enter their shell? Almost all fundamental laws of physics are time-symmetric (meaning there's no mathematical difference between going forward or backward in time). Yet, there is one colossal law that defies this rule: The Second Law of Thermodynamics.
This law ($\Delta S \ge 0$) states that the Entropy (Disorder) of a closed system will always increase. Time is, in essence, the universe's process of moving towards a more disordered state. A breaking glass is the dispersion of energy, and it is statistically impossible to restore that dispersed energy to its original state.
Even if the flow of time is an illusion, this illusion has only one direction: from past to future. Physicist Richard Feynman explains this with the 'Past Hypothesis'. Why was the universe's beginning characterized by incredibly low entropy? The immaculate order with which the universe began at the Big Bang is a statistical miracle.
If the arrow of time is not merely an illusion, then the "Boundary Condition" at the very beginning of the universe is a starting setup specifically established (like a wound clock) for the system to function. We are small islands of order, living within the slowly unwinding spring (increasing entropy) of that clock set in motion on that day, flowing towards chaos.
Newton's laws ($F = ma$), Maxwell's equations, and even the Schrödinger equation of Quantum physics, which form the bedrock of modern physics, are time-symmetric. This means that even if you replace the time variable "$t$" with a negative number ($-t$) in these equations, the mathematics still works flawlessly. Theoretically, the universe rewinding like a film does not violate physical laws.
Austrian physicist Johann Loschmidt voiced this contradiction, asking: "If everything in the subatomic world is bidirectional, why does time have a single arrow in the macroscopic world?"
The answer lies not in individual atoms, but in the probability calculations when a vast number of particles converge. While it's physically possible for perfume molecules dispersed in a room to re-enter the bottle in a billionth of a second, the likelihood of this occurring exceeds the age of the universe.
However, Mathematician Henri Poincaré's Recurrence Theorem makes things even more unsettling: If you wait long enough in a closed universe, even as entropy increases, particles will eventually, by chance, return to their initial perfect states. This implies that if we wait long enough, the broken glass will spontaneously reassemble, and time is trapped in an eternal loop (Eternal Return).
Does the speed of time depend on the watch on your wrist or the current processing load of your mind? In 1962, French geologist Michel Siffre lived for 2 months in a glacial cave without sunlight, a watch, or a calendar. The results were startling: Siffre believed 2 months had passed upon exiting the cave, but in reality, only 25 days had. His mind had perceived time almost twice as slow as the outside world.
This phenomenon is related to the brain's Frame Rate. According to the B-Time Theory (Block Universe) in physics, the past, present, and future all exist simultaneously, like a frozen crystal block in spacetime. Time does not physically "flow".
If all times exist simultaneously, the only thing creating the flow of time is the conscious 'reader head' mechanism in our brain. It processes data blocks sequentially. When the brain's processor slows down or speeds up, the playback speed of this cosmic film changes.
In infancy, as everything is new, the brain records more frames per second, and time flows slowly. As one ages and routines set in, recording decreases, and years pass like a second. There is no real physical time; there is only the render speed of an observer processing data.
The speed of light (300,000 km per second) doesn't just determine how fast light travels; it is also the absolute limit for how quickly any information can travel from one point to another in the universe. The Lorentz Transformations ($\gamma = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1 - v^2/c^2}}$), the heart of Special Relativity, prove that a body's energy approaches infinity as its speed nears the speed of light.
So why does the universe need such a speed limit? If the universe is a massive simulation, the speed of light is the system's "bandwidth" or its processor's clock speed. Exceeding the speed of light in physical space means pushing the processor's computational (causal) capacity to infinity; therefore, instead of crashing, the system forcibly slows you down by converting your energy into mass.
This speed limit applies to masses moving through space. However, there is no limit to the expansion speed of space fabric itself (the void). Distant galaxies recede from us faster than light. This situation traps us within a bubble called the Cosmic Horizon. Beyond that horizon are disconnected (timed out) dead zones, remaining at the outer limits of the simulation.
The law of causality is simple: first, a cause occurs, then an effect follows. You strike the glass (cause) and it breaks (effect). But what if the effect preceded the cause? The "Delayed-Choice Quantum Eraser" experiment, developed by the famous physicist John Archibald Wheeler, is a terrifying experiment that proves time actually flows in both directions.
Imagine a photon traveling towards Earth. Billions of years ago, as this photon passed a galaxy, it had to choose one of two paths: either to pass on its right or on its left. However, according to quantum rules, the photon travels along both paths simultaneously (as a wave function) until it is observed by a telescope on Earth.
When we observe that photon with a telescope today, the photon instantly decides to become a "particle" and collapses into a single path. Yet, this decision should have been made billions of years ago! Our observation today has retroactively determined the photon's path from billions of years ago.
This suggests that the universe is a database written from beginning to end, but "unrendered" because it hasn't been observed yet. A query we make today can instantly update a 13-billion-year-old variable in that database. We are not travelers flowing into the future, but sculptors who write the past with our memories and observations.