- #71
Sjorris
- 23
- 0
John, the 'physical' you are talking of is not the same as all others in this thread are talking about.
You are using a definition of 'physical' which is synonymous with 'material' (in it's broadest sense, so including photons, muons, waves and whatnot), everyone else is using it meaning 'part of a physical theory'.
A mathematical description of time doesn't make it less true. One could easily restate the mathematical formulations in words (sadly, language is far less suitable for describing physical theories than math) and it wouldn't lose or gain any extra credibility.
Time is a concept which is used in a lot* of physical theories, therefore being physical.
Special relativity, for example, makes it very obvious that you can't describe the universe without the concept of time, therefore time has to be part of the universe, so any physical theory describing the universe has to include the concept of time, which makes time a physical concept.
I've been trying to come up with a more clear defintion of what time is, but it's hard without using some kind of self-reference like 'change', distance on the 'time axis', and these are just for the non-relativistic concept of time.
* Simplified physical theories for stationary situations do not need the concept of time, but these are just special cases (d/dt=0) of more general physical theories.