The Envelope Please…

The results are in for the Foundational Questions Institute essay competition on “The Nature of Time,” which we discussed here. And the winners are:

First Juried Prize:

Julian Barbour on “The Nature of Time”

The jury panel admired this essay for its crystal-clear and engaging presentation of a problem in classical dynamics, namely to find a measure for duration or the size of a time interval. The paper argues lucidly, and in a historically well-informed manner, that an appropriate choice for such a measure is not to be found in Newton’s pre-existing absolute notion of time, but rather emerges, in the form of ephemeris time, from the observable motions and the assumption of energy conservation. The paper also suggests how this emergence of duration might be relevant to problems in quantum gravity.

Second Juried Prizes:

(1) Claus Kiefer on “Does Time Exist in Quantum Gravity?”

A fundamental problem in quantum gravity is that the “Wheeler-DeWitt Equation,” probably our most reliable equation of quantum gravity, does not refer to or even suggest anything like time or evolution. In this context time must emerge in the form of relations between a given system and some other system that may be considered a clock. Kiefer beautifully reviews this problem, and argues how, via quantum “decoherence,” time as described by the usual Schroedinger equation in quantum mechanics can emerge from this timeless substratum, via entanglement between physical systems within space, and the spatial metric that controls motion.

(2) Sean Carroll on “What if Time Really Exists?”

Drawing on recent developments in string theory, Carroll impressed the panel with an exciting account of how a gravitating spacetime might in fact be just a holographic approximation to a more fundamental non-gravitating theory for which “time really exists.” Contemplating the difficulties raised by strange recurrences in an everlasting universe, he argues for a strong condition on the set of allowed quantum states that would disallow such repetitions. Carroll closes by attempting to reconcile this picture with recent observations that indicate that the expansion of the universe is accelerating, with surprising results.

Tied for second is not at all bad, considering the number of interesting entries. There are more prizes, actually, as there are “community” awards as well as “juried” prizes, so check those out as well. It’s pretty amusing that the top three essays all attack, in one way or another, whether or not the subject of the competition actually exists. (I was in favor, the others were more skeptical.)

Besides the essays themselves, I very much appreciate the huge amount of work it must have been for the various judges to read through all of them and make hard decisions. Thanks to the FQXi for sponsoring the contest, and thanks to all the judges for doing a great job!

27 Comments

27 thoughts on “The Envelope Please…”

  1. Welldone !
    Not that I am surprised. I thought your essay was remarkable, you managed to make this timeless issue (hum) almost accessible to the motivated neophyte. Thanks for this, and for this blog more generally speaking.

    T.

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  3. Pope Maledict XVI

    What can I say? You was robbed.
    Kiefer is a worthy opponent indeed. But that obscurantist Barbour?

  4. CoffeeCupContrails

    Congratulations. We need more of these on a regular basis. This approach could also be an alternative to or complement the 2 minute videos you mentioned previously, at least for the motivated amateur. Nothing better than a physicist talking philosophy: this technique – conveying deeper thoughts about the nature of the world- helps convey the message of QM to lots of otherwise intelligent folks better than hard math.

    There were plenty of ‘a-ha’ moments in your essay and the others. Thank you.

  5. Peter, “jury” was verbed long ago. Not a recent development.

    JoAnne, there is some loot, which ordinarily I would think was quite a lot. Right now I am buying a house, and any ordinary amount of cash just seems like noise.

  6. It is a bit ironic that the first and second price more or less argue for almost opposite scenarios.

  7. Congratulations! And Happy Monkey!

    Well, just imagine if you’d tried buying a house a year ago. It must be cheaper now. (Sez the guy who’s trying to sell one without losing money on it.)

  8. Nice work and congratulations. I appreciate this blog, following along as best I can but always appreciating the thoughtfulness and first rate commentary.

    I really liked the piece on the movie review and think you may be onto something with your idea of short, single topic videos but there are some things I think that deserve more of our attention (our deferred gratification),and which occasionally demand some work/effort and time on our part. What was it that the person who once used your desk when a reporter asked him to explain/describe his work–why he was a co-winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics–in near Planck time?

    Thanks again to you and to your colleagues for providing a glimpse to rank amateurs like me into your world. I wouldn’t miss it.

  9. Anonymous Commenter

    Congratulations on the top three!

    I’m not sure why you have allowed through an anonymous comment containing a meaningless slight against the winner though.

  10. “I’m not sure why you have allowed through an anonymous comment containing a meaningless slight against the winner though.”

    Indeed. Barbour is many things, but “obscure” is not one of them; he is – and has been for decades – one of the most highly respected people in this particular field.

  11. Pope Maledict XVI

    “one of the most highly respected people in this particular field.”

    Respected by whom? I just re-read his essay. Now, I’m not going to pretend that I know the answers to the mysteries of time. But I will bet my last Kuwaiti dinar that the problems associated with interpreting the Wheeler-De Witt equation will *not* be resolved by sophomore-level disquisitions on the definition of a clock. All that junk about clocks and meter sticks belongs in antiquated introductions to special relativity — you know, the kind designed for over-eager undergraduates who are judged unripe for Minkowski space and “high-powered” mathematics like that….

    Barbour has a following, but I think you will find that remarkably few of them are professional physicists. What the field needs is people like Carroll and Kiefer who can bring the right machinery to bear on it, not yet more vacuous philosophizing about the definition of clocks or “duration”.

  12. “Barbour has a following, but I think you will find that remarkably few of them are professional physicists. “

    Deary me. You really haven’t got a clue what you’re talking about, do you?

  13. Congratulations! If I survive a day on the ski slopes with my daughter,
    I intend to treat myself to an evening of fine Colorado whiskey and your
    essay.

  14. I rather liked Julians paper. It was well written and had interesting history facts that I was not aware off. Yea ok, I doubt it will shed much light on the problem (or lack thereof) of time perse in quantum gravity, but then again none of the other papers really had anything dramatically new either.

  15. celestial toymaker

    “..none of the other papers really had anything dramatically new either.”

    You’re being timeist.

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