The crucial word there is hypothetical.Brian Peacock wrote:Indeed. Running the hypothetical clock backwards led to the postulates which ultimately discredited the steady state universe theory, which was quite a big deal at the time.JimC wrote:Many concepts in physics only require time to be plugged into a formula as a duration, a perfectly scalar number with no direction implied.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steady_State_theory
The way I look at it is that time reversing is actually possible, but ALMOST infinitely unlikely.
If you imagine the size of the Universe, and the number of objects and particles in it, all moving about at random, then time is a record of all of the incidents that happen.
Once things become bigger than single particle size, it's pretty much impossible for time to go backwards.
A single gas particle might possibly go backwards, exactly as it had moved forwards, even though it's movement is random. Sometime or other, that might happen.
But in a flask full of billions of particles, what are the chances of ALL of them, by sheer chance, reversing in the exact same way that they just moved? It's still possible, but the odds are absolutely astronomic.
Then, if you expand that unlikelihood from a flask to a gas cloud bigger than the Milky Way, then you get an idea of how unlikely time is to reverse, even though it's still theoretically possible.
Another way of looking at it is to imagine a domino standing on end, that falls over.
It gets pulled down by gravity, hits the surface that it was standing on, and it's energy of falling gets dissipated as vibrations in the surface, plus noise vibrations in the air, etc etc.
It's actually theoretically possible that all of that energy could reverse the way it came, particle on particle, and the domino could be pushed back upright by the same energy that pulled it down.
But the odds are so incredibly huge against that happening, that nobody will ever see it.
Each vibration has billions of options, at every micro-second. And only one will lead to time reversal.
And that applies to every particle involved in the incident.