TIME, Sequential Arrangement of All Events

sequential arrangement of all events, or the interval between two events in such a sequence. The concept of time may be discussed on several different levels: physical, psychological, philosophical and scientific, and biological.

Physical Time and Its Measurement

The accurate measurement of time by establishing accurate time standards poses difficult technological problems. In prehistory, humans recognized the alternation of day and night, the phases of the moon, and the succession of the seasons; from these cycles, they developed the day, month, and year as the corresponding units of time. With the development of primitive clocks and systematic astronomical observations, the day was divided into hours, minutes, and seconds.

Any measurement of time is ultimately based on counting the cycles of some regularly recurring phenomenon and accurately measuring fractions of that cycle. The earth rotates on its axis at a very nearly constant rate, and the angular positions of celestial bodies can be determined with great precision. Therefore, astronomical observations provide an almost ideal method of measuring time. The true period of rotation of the earth, that with respect to the fixed stars, defines the sidereal day, which is the basis of sidereal time. All sidereal days are equal. The period of rotation of the earth with respect to the sun (i.e., the interval between successive high noons) is the solar day, which is the basis for solar time. Because of the earth's motion in its orbit around the sun, the sun appears to move eastward against the fixed stars, and the earth must make slightly more than one complete rotation to bring the sun back to the observer's meridian. (The meridian is the great circle on the celestial sphere running through the north celestial pole and the observer's zenith; the passage of the sun across the meridian marks high noon.) But the earth's orbital motion is not uniform, and the plane of the orbit is inclined to the celestial equator by 23 1 / 2°. Hence the eastward motion of the sun against the stars is not uniform and the length of the true solar day varies seasonally, but on the average is four minutes longer than the sidereal day. True solar time, as measured by a sundial, does not move at a constant rate. Therefore the mean solar day, with a length equal to the annual average of the actual solar day, was introduced as the basis of mean solar time.

Mean solar time does move at a constant rate and is the basis for the civil time kept by clocks. Actually, the earth's rotation is being slightly braked by tidal and other effects so that even mean solar time is not strictly uniform. The law of gravitation allows prediction of the moon's position in its orbit at a given time; inversely, the exact position of the moon provides a kind of clock that is not running down. Time calculated from the moon's position is called ephemeris time and moves at a truly uniform rate. The accumulated difference between mean solar and ephemeris time since 1900 amounts to more than half a minute. However, the ultimate standard for time is provided by the natural frequencies of vibration of atoms and molecules. Atomic clocks, based on masers and lasers, lose only about three milliseconds over a thousand years. See standard time; universal time.

Psychology of Time

As a practical matter, clocks and calendars regulate everyday life. Yet at the most primitive level, human awareness of time is simply the ability to distinguish which of any two events is earlier and which later, combined with a consciousness of an instantaneous present that is continually being transformed into a remembered past as it is replaced with an anticipated future. From these common human experiences evolved the view that time has an independent existence apart from physical reality.

Philosophy and Science of Time

The belief in time as an absolute has a long tradition in philosophy and science. It still underlies the common sense notion of time. Isaac Newton, in formulating the basic concepts of classical physics, compared absolute time to a stream flowing at a uniform rate of its own accord. In everyday life, we likewise regard each instant of time as somehow possessing a unique existence apart from any particular observer or system of timekeeping. Inherent in the concept of absolute time is the assumption that the simultaneity of two given events is also absolute. In other words, if two events are simultaneous for one observer, they are simultaneous for all observers.

Relativistic Time

Developments of modern physics have forced a modification of the concept of simultaneity. As Albert Einstein demonstrated in his theory of relativity, when two observers are in relative motion, they will necessarily arrange events in a somewhat different time sequence. As a result, events that are simultaneous in one observer's time sequence will not be simultaneous in some other observer's sequence. In the theory of relativity, the intuitive notion of time as an independent entity is replaced by the concept that space and time are intertwined and inseparable aspects of a four-dimensional universe, which is given the name space-time.

One of the most curious aspects of the relativistic theory is that all events appear to take place at a slower rate in a moving system when judged by a viewer in a stationary system. For example, a moving clock will appear to run slower than a stationary clock of identical construction. This effect, known as time dilation, depends on the relative velocities of the two clocks and is significant only for speeds comparable to the speed of light. Time dilation has been confirmed by observing the decay of rapidly moving subatomic particles that spontaneously decay into other particles. Stated naively, particles in motion decay more slowly than stationary particles.

Time Reversal Invariance

In addition to relative time, another aspect of time relevant to physics is how one can distinguish the forward direction in time. This problem is apart from one's purely subjective awareness of time moving from past into future. According to classical physics, if all particles in a simple system are instantaneously reversed in their velocities, the system will proceed to retrace its entire past history. This property of the laws of classical physics is called time reversal invariance (see symmetry); it means that when all microscopic motions of individual particles are precisely defined, there is no fundamental distinction between forward and backward in time. If the motions of very large collections of particles are treated statistically as in thermodynamics, then the forward direction of time is distinguished by the increase of entropy, or disorder, in the system. However, recent discoveries in particle physics have shown that time reversal invariance is not valid even on the microscopic scale for certain phenomena governed by the weak force of nuclear physics.

Biological Time

In the life sciences, evidence has been found that many living organisms incorporate biological clocks that govern the rhythms of their behavior (see rhythm, biological). Animals and even plants often exhibit a circadian (approximately daily) cycle in, for instance, temperature and metabolic rate that may have a genetic basis. Efforts to localize time sense in specialized areas within the brain have been largely unsuccessful. In humans, the time sense may be connected to certain electrical rhythms in the brain, the most prominent of which is known as the alpha rhythm at about ten cycles per second.

Bibliography

See S. V. Toulmin and J. Goodfield, Discovery of Time (1965); S. Hawking, A Brief History of Time: From the Big Bang to Black Holes (1988).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...in the city. This sequential arrangement foregrounds the importance...will tell her by all means ... said...longer passages of time to be assigned to...Within parts, events triggered by Annas...measured coverage of time. In addition to...
...understanding of events that appear to...contrast to the sequential analysis of stages...understandings of time as a scalpel in...the five zhen time-markers : sun...been a convenient arrangement for divisions in threes and sixes. All events in the...same phase in all other fivefold...
...and sequential time The quintessential...metanarrative and sequential organizing epitomized...described above, all draw on models of sequential time and time...oneness with all that has been...the sequential arrangement of events across time is...
...Sequential Arrangements For example...places at one time, a sequential arrangement may be created...Combined Arrangements Finally...or special events, resulting...mixed set of arrangements. For example...to use a sequential arrangement for summer...responsible for all executive...
...Aristotle says, the arrangement of its "component...happening at the same time, as in the preceding...in a chain of events. Such descriptions...the indexical events. To limit a...removing one event the whole is...of indexical events does not unify...structure of all the component...connected by the sequential nature of indexical...
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...feature is the sequential presentation...exposure time for 85...for 800 ms times the number...a linear arrangement of eight...varies in time rather than...response arrangements for performance...temporal arrangement of information...completion of all six sessions...critical event could occur...critical events) to 7200...were three sequential blocks of...
...serial reaction time (SRT; Nissen...the sequence of events is not random...that reaction times (RTs) progressively...no doubt that sequential behavior is involved...ecological validity to sequential tasks. The use...within a short time in a large variety...researchers address all of these difficulties...and the spatial arrangement of the keys on...
...result of dune destruction during flooding events with subsequent deposition of the remobililized...suggested by frequent channel overbank events. Stratigraphic level 42.5 m forms a...alluvial fan and the frequent flooding events made temporary lake formation possible...
...Institutional Arrangements and International...historical event sequencing...historical event sequencing...historical events and junctures...of pivotal events over time. We then proceed...during modern times, a third more...structures if all of our studies...Studies and Event Sequencing...a part of a sequential story" (p...
...comparing the event history model...effects of living arrangements and changes...family size all affect the...that, when all other variables...increased over time. Although...childhood living arrangements, residential...separate, sequential periods of...period of time (time t - 4 to t...measured between times t - 2 and t...
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...Financial Arrangements-A System...number of sequential bubbles has...mother of all asset price...At the same time, regulations...financial event of the past...financial arrangement to another...wars was a time of unprecedented...unusual economic events of recent...percent of all outstanding...
...description really sequential? In the same...modes of non-sequential perception...know how many times the theme was...rather than a sequential account of the...consideration all together...expected order of events, tonal plan...Sometimes, an event such as modulation...again but this time as an inner...1964 revised arrangement, did not hesitate...
...biding his time. But at least...display at times a new-found...as well as time and location...sources exist, all without text...cadence,25 the arrangement adhered to...virtus, the arrangement is dexterously...serialistic arrangements of the tenor...several vocal events unfolding...within an all-encompassing...material for sequential development...
...of geological time, but up and down...exhibits construe arrangement by time in such...this cardinal event is either not shown at all or relegated to...representative samples for all animal groups...time, but as a sequential tale of the most...treated last? After all, although we...temporal order of events during the history...
...perceptions of time and space, attribution...might address all these tasks successfully...involve a series of events that are told...perception of space: events that take place...whereby an event B happens as...narrative is told: arrangement, emphasis or...any one else in all human history...generate classic sequential stories have...
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TIME , sequential arrangement of all events sequential arrangement of all events, or the interval between two events in such a sequence. The concept of time may be discussed on several different levels: physical, psychological, philosophical...


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