Among the popular books that I know, the two that undoubtedly give most prominence to the problem of time in quantum gravity are Lee Smolin’s
It may be that the reason why a book like this one, devoted exclusively to the idea that time does not exist, has not hitherto been published by a physicist has a sociological explanation. For professionals working in institutes and dependent on the opinions of peers for research funding, such a book might damage their reputation and put further research in jeopardy. After all, at first it does seem outrageous to suggest that time does not exist. It may not be accidental that I, as an independent not reliant on conventional funding, have been prepared to ‘come out’.
In this connection, my experience at a big international conference in Spain in 1991 devoted to the arrow of time was very interesting. The following is quoted from my paper in the conference proceedings (available in paperback as Halliwell
During the Workshop, I conducted a very informal straw-poll, putting the following question to each of the 42 participants:
The results were as follows: 20 said there was no time at a fundamental level, 12 declared themselves to be undecided or wished to abstain, and 10 believed time did exist at the most basic level. However, among the 12 in the undecided/abstain column, 5 were sympathetic to or inclined to the belief that time should not appear at the most basic level of theory.
Thus, a clear majority doubted the existence of time. When I took my straw-poll, I said that I intended to publish the names with their opinions, which was why two people abstained, to remain anonymous. As it happens the conference generated immense media interest in Spain, not least because of the presence of Stephen Hawking and Nobel Laureate Murray Gell-Mann, and the reporter from
It was at the later conference that I learned a
The Ultimate Things (p. 15) I mentioned in the Preface the difficulty of writing without using temporal notions. The curious state of modern physics as outlined in Box 2 compounds the problem. Because quantum theories are obtained from classical theories by so-called quantization, and classical concepts are much closer to everyday experience, the language used by most physicists, myself included, often seems to imply that the classical theories are somehow deeper than the quantum theories obtained from them. But that is certainly only a reflection of our way to the truth. What is needed is a clear language in which to describe the quantum truth directly and an explanation, based on it, of why the world appears classical to us. I am proposing the notion of a Now as the basic quantum notion.