We already spoke about time and we don’t want here to consider the evolution that the concept of time have had in the history of Philosophy and Science, instead we want to focus our attention on the point that the majority of us care the most: time passes by.
This fact seems to conciliate our daily experience with the evolution of physic which at the moment allows us to travel to the future, but not to the past: we can’t go back.
Probably many of us will instead prefer to go back than looking inside the future and jet scientific accuracy is oriented in only one direction: a time arrow does exist fired from the thermodynamic bow.
All physical states go towards chaos and jet if we get sick our body fights in order to go back to the former state of equilibrium/wellness or at least it tries to find a new harmonic state that allows survival going against the dominance of chaos in ourselves. If we add the matters of will, temper and attitude with which each one of us faces life, the idea that a positive attitude increases our chance of winning the battle gets always stronger.
Here the question naturally arises: if we are physical entities, hence subjected to the very same laws of the rest of the whole we are part of, how does it come our inclination in fighting the natural tendency to chaos as the laws of Entropia teach us? How does it come that we are so anti – thermodynamic?
We are the first felling the time passing by and since always we have been building instruments to measure the time; the definition of a past, a present and a future is essential in organizing our life as individuals and as communities, jet our determination and perseverance in preserving and restoring past harmonic states is a matter of fact as well as our mental disposal in figuring the future according to past experiences.
Funny enough, but probably not that much at this point, Physics itself needs to put time aside in order to write the fundamental laws governing the Universe.