Gemaakt door: roberto.c.alfredo in physics op
When someone says “spacetime is doomed,” the phrase sounds apocalyptic. It sounds as if space and time are about to be thrown into the cosmic furnace, along with our kitchens, calendars, bicycles, coffee cups, and Tuesday afternoons.
But in modern physics and philosophy of mind, the claim is usually subtler than that.
“Spacetime is doomed” does not mean that the world around us is fake in the ordinary sense. It does not mean that distances are useless, clocks are meaningless, or the room you are sitting in is imaginary. Spacetime works astonishingly well as a description of the world at the scales where we normally live. Einstein’s general relativity treats gravity not as a force pulling through space, but as the curvature of spacetime itself. That idea has been tested again and again, from the orbit of Mercury to gravitational waves.
So why would anyone say spacetime is doomed?
The short answer is: spacetime may not be fundamental.
That is different from saying it is unreal.
Real But Not Fundamental
A thing can be real without being the deepest layer of reality.
Temperature is real. You can feel heat. You can burn your hand. You can freeze water. But temperature is not fundamental in the same way that individual molecular motion is. At a deeper level, temperature describes the average behavior of many particles moving around.
A wave is real. It can knock over a boat. But a wave is also a pattern in water, not a separate substance floating above it.