All that is as it should be according to the theory. Of course the notion of time "running slower" is a formality. In reality, time does not run at all.Cerveny wrote:To the dilatation/contraction: simply saying - "real" means it has any real impact to the subject. See the example: I am moving by very fast velocity. STR says "your time runs slower" (in comparison with other world). But do I live longer? No, all „contractions/dilatations" are only formal changes following from change of representation (frame). They used to prove STR by some muons caught on the Earth surface. But from such muons’ point of view we should have lived for thousands years (if mentioned time dilatations are real). STR contractions/dilatations are only formal. It is as if I use, let say, hexadecimal calculator instead of decimal one (in the best case)
I have answered that question from you before. Let me quote our exchange from that other thread: (I've coloured the posts for easy distinction.)Cerveny wrote:As for determinism: Do you really believe that you are already prepared somewhere in (remote) region of "space-time", let say, ten years older? Perhaps the common purpose of the mankind is determined; perhaps it is a "blossom" of the life, prepared for an extra-terrestrial life spreading, but hardly in the detail…
Cerveny wrote:The continuum of “space-time” is nonsense - the time after the “now” is not created yet.
Notvacka wrote:It's the notion of "now" that is nonsense. The only difference between past and future is your perspective.
"Not created yet" is nonsense. Our future differs from our past in that we are not there yet, as opposed to not there any longer.
After 100 odd years Einstein's theory of relativity is still going strong, and it will never be proven wrong. It might be superseded by some other theory, but that theory would have to include Einstein's theory as a special case, just like Einstein never proved Newton's theories wrong either; they are included as a special case and still perfectly useful.
Cerveny wrote:Let us suppose the "space-time continuum" really exists. Then its "time-cut", the projection in the certain time (say 1/1/2013) must (now) exist too. What is in it (prepared)? Elementary particle? You? The concept of space-time supposes determined Universe. It is not acceptable for me. Such Universe does not have sense. And it is one of the reasons why we are to bring the philosophy in the physics. After 100 years we are not able to quantize TR for many serious reasons. In the time when Einstein was creating TR even antimatter was not known. We prove TR by unbelievable precise measurement but we ignore "dark matter/energy" phenomena that are about many orders more expressive. And what is worse, we ignore logic and health sense.
Notvacka wrote:It's common to think that the deterministic nature of relativity theory and the randomness of quantum mechanics somehow contradict each other. But, interestingly, time has no arrow in quantum mechanics. The cause might as well depend upon the effect as the other way around.
In quantum mechanics, as in every day life, probability only exists in the absence of certainty. When you look into the box, then you find out if the cat is alive or dead. And after the fact the "probability" is always 100 percent either way. But since "after" can be substituted with "before" on a quantum level, the "probability" is always 100 percent. Which makes quantum mechanics agree perfectly with Eintstein's theory of relativity.
The whole probability thing stems from our inability to exactly predetermine quantum events. But since time has no arrow as far as quantum mechanics are concerned, there is no difference between predetermination and postdetermination.
Cerveny wrote:Quantum theory only estimates the probability of the particular events. It is impossible to calculate (for example) decay time of particular neutron. Free neutrons usually decay during several minutes - it is all we know. Another example you can see in tunneling electrons – we can not resolve the particular time when some electron successes. Such accidental phenomena are the essence, base of arrow of the time phenomena. From the same initial configuration we can get different results. The causality pays on this (quantum) level only in the sum… Only after the particular phenomenon occurs the new time layer of Universe is added, is glued to the history. The history grows, condensates, crystallizes from the "future", better: from the outside odd-causal phase. BB was only the calm beginning of condensation in this context
PS: You certainly do not believe your every action is in detail prepared, waiting somewhere in the remote space-time
Notvacka wrote:The words "prepared" and "waiting" are not entirely accurate, since they imply one further dimension of temporality, but yes, that's exactly what I believe. The notion that the future doesn't exist, just because we haven't experienced it yet, seems much harder to believe. That the future would exist in some vague, unformed way seems even more ridiculous. Every point in time must be as valid as any other. What is "past" and what is "future" is entirely a matter of perspective. No particular moment of "now" is more "real" than the next.