Without a sense of time, leading us from cradle to grave, our lives would make little sense. But on the most fundamental level, physicists aren't sure whether the sort of time we experience exists at all. We talk to three experts and find out if time could potentially be moving backwards as well as forwards.
Featuring Sean Carroll, Homewood professor of natural philosophy at Johns Hopkins University, Emily Adlam, postdoctoral associate of the philosophy of physics at Western University and Natalia Ares, Royal Society university research fellow at the University of Oxford.
This episode was presented by Miriam Frankel and produced by Hannah Fisher. Executive producers are Jo Adetunji and Gemma Ware. Social media and platform production by Alice Mason, sound design by Eloise Stevens and music by Neeta Sarl. A transcript is available here. Sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation.
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Anthill 21: Growing up
Anthill 20: Myths
Anthill 19: Pain
Anthill 18: Revisiting the Russian Revolution
Anthill 17: Science by the seaside
Anthill 16: Humour me
Anthill 15: Unexplored places
Anthill 14: Music on the mind
Anthill 13: All the world's a game
Anthill 12: Don't remember this
Anthill 11: waste not, want not
Anthill 10: The future
Anthill 9: When scientists experiment on themselves
Anthill 8: Goodbye 2016, hello 2017
Anthill 7: On belief
Anthill 6: Into the darkness
Anthill 5: Reboot – part 2
Anthill 5: Reboot – part 1
Anthill 4: Fuel
Anthill 3: Rooting for the underdog
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