Can time flow backwards?

Philosophy of Science 21 (2):79-92 (1954)
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Abstract

The nature of time is one of the crucial problems in the philosophy of science and it cannot be solved by an appraisal of past formulations of the time concept, nor by introspective examination of our awareness of time. Among the philosopher's tasks is the seemingly thankless one of scrutinizing the advance of modern science for significant facts and ideas, and to integrate these into the larger notions he has formed of time. Recent physics bears suggestions of peculiar interest in this regard; chief among them is the theory of quantum electrodynamics developed by Feynman which involves reversals in the course of time and thereby cherishes, in the minds of many, an age-old phantasy of more than scientific appeal. To appraise that theory in philosophic terms is the purpose of this note.

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Citations of this work

On going backward in time.John Earman - 1967 - Philosophy of Science 34 (3):211-222.
The flow of time.P. J. Zwart - 1972 - Synthese 24 (1-2):133 - 158.

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