ABSCHRIFTEnglish

Why Did Time Start Going Forward?

29m 47s4,125 Wörter804 segmentsEnglish

VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT

0:00

[Music]

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a roman bishop sits in the window of his

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episcopal home

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on the north african coast it is late

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afternoon

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he looks out at the sun setting over the

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mediterranean

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and watches the waves break along the

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shore sand

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piling into disordered heaps when the

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sun sets

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it will be time to light the lamps if he

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wants to continue his work

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he is augustine of hippo theologian

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philosopher and saint famed for his five

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million words of writing

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that have survived to the modern age he

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longs for the golden light to remain

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for time to pause or even run backwards

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what might that look like

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he considers the sun would rise from the

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horizon not so different to the glory of

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a dawn

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but all else would seem very strange the

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waves crashing on the beach must collect

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and assemble themselves in the most

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unnatural fashion

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with water droplets rising towards one

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another into a teetering pile

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before retreating back out to sea it

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seems to violate the lord's natural

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order

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and augustine shies away from the

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discomforting thought

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what then if he could witness time laid

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out before him

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moving forward inexorably from one

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moment

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to the next the waves would crash

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unceasingly on the shore advancing on

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the bustling town until it reduced his

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home to little more than a heap of

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rubble and sand

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as his quill drips ink onto the

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parchment augustine's mind

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wanders to see time itself advancing

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ruining all in its path spreading its

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relentless chaos

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the present world of man crumbles to

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meaningless piles

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the thriving natural world eventually

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decays to nothing more than dust in the

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wind

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and in the sky stars wink out one by one

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until there is nothing left by which to

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measure the passing moments

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with nothing more for time to devour

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would this finally be the end of the

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voracious beast itself

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what then is time if not the inevitable

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march of disorder the inevitable

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destruction of god's structured universe

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into nothing more

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than an eternal pile of sand

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shaking himself from the darkness of his

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waking dream augustine finds it truly is

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darkening outside

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with the last glimmers of the setting

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sun he breathes deeply

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and scratches out his final words for

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the day

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what then is time

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but had augustine really been able to

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see into the future

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and probe the minds of modern scholars

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he would have seen that his dark

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imaginings

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were not only accurate but substantiated

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by the highest theoretical physics and

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cosmology

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the hungry beast of time powered by

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ever-growing entropy

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is unstoppable and relentless it is

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driven not by some demon bent on

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destruction but by the unassailable

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forces of mathematics

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that have gripped the cosmos from its

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first moments to its inevitable end

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this entropy bound up in the mathematics

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of particles and energy powers the arrow

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of time

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forcing our eyes forward into a future

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that is unavoidable as it

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is disturbing and the past that is

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forever

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just out of reach

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[Music]

4:00

some one and a half millennia after

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saint augustine found his words lacking

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on the subject of time the industrial

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english city of manchester

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was preparing to manipulate it in the

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early 19th century

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timekeeping clocks were calibrated

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against local sundials

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giving rise to times that could differ

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by as much as 30 minutes

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between the west and east coasts of

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england

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but with the advent of the industrial

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revolution and the spread of the railway

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network

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the country suddenly needed a unified

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system

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now the difference of a few minutes

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between london and other stations on the

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network could mean passengers missing

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their trains or even

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collisions on intersecting tracks and so

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it was decided that for the first time

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in history

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time itself would be changed

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in january 1846 the residents of

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manchester

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collectively traveled through time

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jumping 13 minutes

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in an instant as the town's clocks were

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adjusted to match the standard time set

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by the royal observatory

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in greenwich london

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although time had been measured for

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millennia following the passage of the

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sun across the sky

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this was the first time it had been

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standardized

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thanks to the incessant march of

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industry but in truth

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this so-called standard time is

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arbitrary

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little more than an imaginary structure

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for our busy lives

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the sun still sets in manchester 13

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minutes later than in london

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regardless of the time on the clocks

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and yet the steam-powered locomotives of

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the industrial revolution

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did open our minds to the nature

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of time in an altogether

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unexpected way

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some 20 years before england's clock

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spent to the unstoppable force of the

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railway

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efforts to understand the heat engines

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that powered these mechanical

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juggernauts led french engineer and

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physicist

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sadie carneau to make a prophetic

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observation

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steam engines had been quickly adopted

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across the rapidly industrializing world

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bringing success and riches to all who

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embraced them

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but little work had been done to

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understand how they really worked

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this was the concern of carnot when in

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1824

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he penned his influential reflections on

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the motive power

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of fire his observation which may seem

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simple and obvious now

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was that heat always flows from a warmer

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body

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to a colder one this explains how a

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fireplace can warm a cold room

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why ice cubes melt when they're left in

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the sun and why molten newly formed

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planets solidify and cool in the cold

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vacuum of space

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it is an irreversible natural process

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and it is this

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that provides the motive power in all

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heat engines

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in this carno laid the foundation for

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the theory

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that was to become the second law of

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thermodynamics

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this law was developed over the

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following century until it was brought

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in line with our evolving physical

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frameworks

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now we recognize that not just heat

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but all systems move in a single

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direction

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one that will decrease the free energy

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of that system

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today we describe this change in terms

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of entropy

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a mathematical way of measuring the

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amount of disorder within a system

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specifically it measures the number of

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