How to Talk to People - How to Keep Time: Time Tips From the Universe
Episode Date: January 8, 2024Time can feel like a subjective experience—different at different points in our lives. It’s also a real, measurable thing. The universe may be too big to fully comprehend, but what we do know coul...d help inform the ways we approach our understanding of ourselves, our purpose, and our time. Theoretical physicist and black-hole expert Janna Levin explains how the science of time can inspire new thinking and fresh perspectives on a much larger scale. Music by Rob Smierciak (“Slow Money, Money Time, Guitar Time, Ambient Time”), Gavin Luke (“Time Zones”), Hanna Lindgren (“Everywhere Except Right Here”), and Dylan Sitts (“On the Fritz”). Write to us at howtopodcast@theatlantic.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I'm Anne Applebaum. Over the past year, as I watched Donald Trump demand unprecedented new powers,
I wondered, don't he and his team fear that these same powers could one day be used by a different administration
and a different president to achieve very different goals? Well, maybe they are afraid. And maybe that's why they're
using their new tools to change our institutions, even to alter the playing field in advance of midterm elections later this year,
to make sure their opponents can't win.
Ultimately, destroying trust is the currency of autocrats.
We could win, but we are very, very, very likely to lose
if we keep treating this as business as usual.
Reporting on the sweeping changes unfolding in our country
and preparing you to think about what might happen next.
The new season of Autocracy in America, available now.
The one sense in which time is frustratingly different is that I cannot extend equally in each direction.
I cannot just turn around and go into the past.
Okay.
And I seem to be always driven forward into the future.
I can stand still in space, but I can't seem to stand still in time.
Welcome to How to Keep Time.
I'm Becca Rashid, co-host, and producer of the show.
And I'm Ian Bogost, co-host and contributing writer at The Atlantic.
One time I took a nap and I remember I woke up at sunset, but it looked like dawn.
And I was like, I'm late for work.
Like, what have I done?
And that's why I avoid naps in general.
It's just I'm so disoriented every time.
Oh, yeah.
When you travel, you know, like I travel overseas and I'm jet lagged.
And the time is all messed up and I wake up in the middle of the night.
and I can't go to sleep or you start falling asleep, you know, in the middle of the day.
You're so far away.
Like, what time is it even?
And you can't control it.
I love how I'm just napping and you're traveling the world, yes.
I have naped like you described too.
There are all these ways that I experience these weird lags in my space and time,
not just with napping, but sometimes if I'm really tired, like a song sounds slower to me.
Like the beat feels like it's delayed in some way.
Or if I'm really caffeinated, it feels faster.
And same thing with time.
Like maybe I'm just getting older or it feels like time is moving faster.
But I hate to tell you this, Becca, but I think you may just be getting older because, you know, time feels like it moves faster for me year to year.
And then sometimes I'll look at myself in the mirror, you know, after looking at a photo.
And I'm like, okay, hair didn't used to be that color quite so much, right?
But it doesn't feel like much time has passed, you know?
There's a kind of like fun house mirror effect with time's passage where you think you look a certain way in time, but it turns out you're all wonky.
Right. It reminds me when I used to go home as a college student and my little brother, who's six years younger than me, looked like a different person every year I visited.
And now the way I see my parents aging, it's like I...
you're aging at the same time.
It's not just them.
It's also you.
But you don't have that sense of it inside your own head.
You need some reference from outside of your body to remind you.
Oh, yeah. Time.
Jana, are you a timely person?
Do you think of yourself as a timely person?
Very often on time.
I really am.
But I can also get lost in time.
I mean, I think if you're going to do theoretical physics
and you're going to hunch over a blank, unlined sheet of paper,
which is what I like, with a pencil for 12 hours,
that you've got to be able to kind of turn off some of the chatter,
some of the internal biarrhythms that make you so aware of time passing.
So, Becca, I spoke with the theoretical physicist, Jan 11,
to understand what it means to place ourselves in the universe,
in particular as it relates to time.
I'm Jana Levin, and I'm a professor of physics and astronomy at Barnard College of Columbia University.
Levin specializes in black holes, actually.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah, and black holes are weird because time seems to behave totally differently around them.
So what is it about black holes?
What is their role in helping us understand the nature of time?
The nature of time seems to go more and more out of sync as you get close.
and closer to the black hole. So let's say you're an astronaut orbiting far from a black hole
and you have this beautiful clock and it's telling you what time it is and your body is exactly
in sync with the clock and movies run at a normal rate and music plays at a normal rate and
your companion, another astronaut, has a perfectly synchronized clock built by the same manufacturer,
but they jump into the black hole. What you find is that as they get closer and closer
to the black hole, the astronaut from far away will literally see,
the ticks on the clock appear to take longer, to be spaced in a more elongated way, so that it says,
though time is running more slowly for the astronaut who's falling towards the black hole.
Now, it's not just this clock. It's also the music they're playing, the movies they're filming,
they all are running slowly compared to the astronaut far away. Now, the one who jumps in
thinks their clock is normal. Absolutely normal experience. They just think the astronaut left on
this orbit far from the black hole is running very, very fast, racing through years of their lives.
All the movies are fast, the music is fast, and the clocks are all speeding ahead. And they realize
that they've come out of sync as they get closer and closer to the black hole.
So it's almost like the black hole is a lens for physicists to ask,
difficult questions about time.
You can see it more clearly
through the subject of the black hole.
Yeah, the way the black hole
distort slows time down
as you approach its horizon
relative to somebody very far away.
It makes the black hole
like a magnifying glass in some sense
so that you can look on
higher and higher energies
and smaller and smaller time scales
because it's like this magnifying glass
kind of quality.
Okay, the magnifying glass metaphor is really helpful to me.
But, Jana, I'm still not sure I understand what time is.
Like, I kind of have no idea what time is when I stop and think about it,
even though I understand what you're describing and I live in time all the time.
So once you use this magnifying glass of the black hole to shed light on the nature of time in the universe,
what is the answer?
Like, what is time anyway?
Hmm. I'm not sure anyone can give you a fair answer to that question. Oh, no. But we would all love to. I could say, let's go back and say, what is space? Let's start there and see how time is different. So I can say, well, I know I can move, extend my hand to the left and I can extend my hand to the right in space. I have a kind of intuitive notion of that. And I can also measure space with rulers and how far away things are. Now, time is.
can be very similar to spaces what Einstein realized that there is sort of a four-dimensional space time.
And in some sense, as the person nears the black hole, it's as though they're rotating what the astronaut far away called space into what they're calling time.
It's as though they're rotating away in this four-dimensional space time.
But the one sense in which time is frustratingly different is that I cannot extend equally in each time.
direction. I cannot just turn around and go into the past. And I seem to be always driven forward
into the future. Even if I'm standing still in space, I can't stop the next moment from passing.
I can't stop my body from aging and we always go forward in this direction. You know, some of the
happiest memories I have from childhood with my brother was, you know, operating under the same
schedules in a way, you know, waking up, going to school together, putting our backpacks on,
getting yelled at to put our jackets on, and then sort of rushing out the door and then, you know,
coming home after three, like, eat something, have a snack together.
Drink some water.
Yeah.
The thing I forget to do, yes.
And, you know, now my brother recently moved to Sweden for grad school, fancy fancy, that
feeling that we're kind of on the same rhythm of each day, we're kind of operating under the same
clock and sort of like moving through our days together is completely not there. And, you know,
I don't know what time of day he does his work or I don't always know where he is in space at any
given time. Yeah, I think I see what you mean, Becca. Like, I have two adult kids and they live
in a different city from me. And I'd much rather be closer to them more of the time. And, you know,
in part that's just about wanting to be close, like physically close.
Of course.
But when I do see them in person, then it also feels different.
It feels better, but in a different way, because we're occupying the same time, not just the same space.
Even if nothing important is happening, it's happening to us together.
I think that's exactly what I miss is like that empty time we would share with each other.
So, Becca, there's space and there's time.
And time is fundamental to existence, just like spaces.
but our relationship with space and time as human beings are very different from one another, right?
Right, right.
Like, you could go visit your brother in Sweden.
You could get on a plane and bridge that distance if you wanted to or need it to.
You can move around in space.
If you're like, you know, stuck in your car, driving home, you know, if only I can get home, but you will.
You'll get home eventually and then you'll be there.
But you can't really do that in time.
You can't move around in time.
You can only go in one direction, and that's forward.
I want to ask you more about this, and I was thinking about it as I tried to prepare for our conversation.
So I have three kids, and two of them are grown up, and one of them is a lot younger.
And before my youngest was born, I didn't think about her at all because she didn't exist.
But now the idea that she once didn't exist is kind of impossible for me to imagine.
And there's a name for this, right?
It's called the Arrow of Time.
So what does that idea mean, the Arrow of Time?
Just in response to what you just described so beautifully, we all feel this asymmetry intuitively.
We have a great deal of anxiety about the idea that we might not exist.
in the future, but we're completely okay with the idea that we did not exist prior to some point
in the past.
And that asymmetry is just built into us.
We're not distressed to believe that there was a point before which your daughter didn't
exist.
Yeah.
This is just because we all fundamentally feel the asymmetry.
We intuitively is just part of our everyday experience.
Now, we don't actually know that it's that fun.
It is conceivable. Many people have played with this within the context of Einstein's theory of relativity, that you could find a path where you did go backwards in time. And there are all kinds of solutions that we know exist mathematically, but we think that reality will forbid these mathematical solutions from ever becoming actualized in the universe. But we don't know for sure that the asymmetry cannot be violated.
Does that contribute to our, like, cultural obsession with time and the way that it flows forward?
I'm thinking here of, like, you know, time loops and their popularity in science fiction, you know, Tenet or Doctor Strange or, like, the time dilation effects in a film like Interstellar or even, like, alternate timelines.
These examples in novels and film of playing with time.
What do you make of those as a physicist?
Is this like our cultural attempt to wrestle with the arrow of time?
Yeah, I think it's a really good way to challenge your belief system.
One of the things we have to do in theoretical physics is get over our intuitions that are based on a very limited experience of being a certain size, evolving under the sun and having certain eyes as a result of that, and living a certain duration and moving relatively slowly so we don't really notice.
relativity as an experience. So it's beautiful, actually, to do these thought experiments and really
challenge your biases and try to break them and see maybe we could go backward in time. Maybe I
shouldn't presume that just because it's never happened to me and that it couldn't happen
and that there wouldn't be a physical, mathematically realizable way to do that. And so we
play those games all the time.
I wonder in your job, which is to think about cosmic things, how does that impact your daily life?
When you're like commuting or going to the grocery store, what is your knowledge or understanding of the nature of the universe?
How does it contribute to your day-to-day life?
Well, there's a lot of scientists who will say that whether or not they're comfortable using the word spiritual,
that thinking about these things
gives them a profound sense of meaning
and a connectedness
to something much faster
than their ordinary lives.
And I often, especially,
you know, we're at a time of great pain
and strife and trouble in the world.
And I often will meditate on this bird's eye,
even beyond the bird's eye,
to really imagine the earth under this star
and the star that's been burning for billions of years,
and then panning away from the star
and imagining this entire solar system,
all of us, silly little people warring together,
orbiting together around a supermassive black hole
26,000 light years away.
And that that is where we are.
That is how we got here.
And so do I think about that
if I get cut off on my bike on my way over to the studio
to talk to you? I don't.
You know, I'm shaking my fist in the air
and I'm frustrated, but I do believe
that in a deep sense
it really has altered my sense
of who we are.
I'm Ann Applebaum.
Over the past year, as I watched
Donald Trump demand unprecedented
new powers, I wondered.
Don't he and his team fear
that these same powers could one day
be used by a different administration,
and a different president to achieve very different goals?
Well, maybe they are afraid.
And maybe that's why they're using their new tools
to change our institutions,
even to alter the playing field in advance of midterm elections later this year,
to make sure their opponents can't win.
Ultimately, destroying trust is the currency of autocrats.
We could win, but we are very, very, very likely to lose
if we keep treating this as business as usual.
Reporting on the sweeping changes unfolding in our country
and preparing you to think about what might happen next.
The new season of Autocracy in America, available now.
Ian, you know how people make like a five-year plan or like a 10-year plan?
I've never, ever been that kind of planner because that's just not my experience of life or time has ever been.
But I realize that people can have this impulse to control their time
because you're one person in the universe with very little control
and all you can do is map out maybe your weeks, maybe your years in a way
that feels like it's under your control.
And hopefully at the end of the day,
feels like you've made the most of whatever chunk you're given.
Yeah.
And, you know, as Jan is explaining, that feeling comes from the fact that we can go forward.
and backward and sideways in space,
but we can't do the same thing in time.
Right.
And when it comes down to it,
that's sort of just the fundamental puzzle and problem with time.
That is, as normal-sized objects, beings in the universe,
we cannot go backward.
And so that feeling is also weird, you know.
But with like black holes,
those are interesting to physicists
because they're exceptions,
or at least potentially exceptions,
to the normal rules of physics.
and so therefore they offer these kind of lenses
through which scientists can look at time
and understand it better.
You know, that's great for theoretical physicists,
but not so great for the rest of us.
Like, I don't have a black hole nearby, Becca,
that I can sort of ask questions about time.
Thankfully, yes.
But I wonder, like, are there other lenses
that ordinary people can use to make sense of time?
Right. I feel like we, humans need a few ways
to understand ourselves better.
And even though it's not directly related to physics, Ian, this theory called the social clock, which Bernice New Garden, a social psychologist, came up with in the 1960s, can help explain that pressure that we can feel that we should be hitting certain social markers at different stages of our life, at different ages specifically.
Okay.
Obviously, the big things like marriage, having children.
But I was thinking about how those are norms dictated by society, right?
But let's say you're someone who was raised with two cultures.
Then the social clock can have sort of different terms depending on which society or which cultural norms you're trying to fit into.
It's like keeping track of different time zones.
You have to keep track of different social clocks.
Exactly.
If you think about the social clock, not as a set of hard and fast rules or even cultural rules,
but as something more like that lens,
like the way that Jana thinks about black holes.
Like, you're going to look at time through the lens of the black hole.
You can look at your own personal time
through the lens of a particular social clock,
and that could be an American one,
or it could be a different one.
You know, there's less pressure, perhaps.
It can start to make the social clock feel as chaotic as time itself
from, like, one line moving chronologically
through all these different life changes
and events into this sort of wave of unpredictability.
Maybe that leaves more room for the unexpected and for serendipity, too.
So, Jenna, how much time do we have?
Like, is time infinite?
It's a really difficult question.
I don't know if space is infinite either.
We know it has a finite past.
We can't think of time as outside of the universe anymore.
We can only think of time as a question.
of the universe. Or it could be that the universe just expands and expands and expands until
essentially each particle is so far away from every other that there's really no meaning to the
passage of time anymore. How would you even know time has passed? To know time has passed,
I have to experience some change. It could be a change just in my thoughts. It could be an
accumulation of heartbeats, or it could be a tick on a clock. But all of those things require
more than a single particle floating alone in the universe. And in fact, if I were to show you this
as a movie, if I were to show you a movie of a single particle, you would have no idea how long
if the movie was running faster, slow, if it was true to time, whatever that could possibly
mean, you would not have any scientific way of measuring the passage of time.
Jenny, you mentioned change. Is that all time really is, just change?
We do, yes, measure time through change. If I were to a classic example, take this glass
of water I have here and smash it to the floor and film this for you, you would absolutely
believe the movie had run forward in time because you know that individual pieces of glass everywhere
and water splashed everywhere, that that's the logical way things unfold. They don't, if I were to show
you the movie running backwards, reassemble into a seamless glass with water inside it naturally. That's
not something we see. What we do see is we see changed in the direction of greater disorder. We do not
see change in the direction of increased order. And so that's also part of the arrow of time
conversation. If I were to show you movies, you're always going to be able to guess that one's
running forward in time if you see things going towards greater disorder, like smashing apart,
more disordered. And you're always going to know they're running backwards if you see things
perfectly reassembling. Huh. So we do seem to measure the passage of time as time.
tightly correlated with the increase in disorder.
This is making me feel a little more at peace with the chaos in my own life, I think.
But it reminds me of the fact that, you know, time feels different at different times.
Like a long flight can feel really slow, but then the vacation that you're flying to goes by really quickly.
Is there a physical reason why time feels different, or is that a psychological thing?
I think one of the explanations could be this one of disorder, and a lot of people will cite this,
that when there is a lot of change relative to kind of your overall experience psychologically,
you will consider that to be time moving more quickly.
And so if you're a child and you're having an experience, your overall body of experience is so small
that actually psychologically your perception of time is kind of slow.
lower. And as you get older, that same experience you might share with a child seems to you that
time is passing faster because your overall body of experience is larger relative to the amount of
change you're perceiving. Do you find yourself using your knowledge of the physics of change
in your day-to-day life? Does it make you feel better during a busy week that, oh, like, there's just a lot of
change happening right now?
Yeah, you know, it can, but it can also remind me not to have such fractured attention.
Huh.
Because I think it can feel like life just flies by and more considered attention.
I do think it elongates, at least for me, that experience of a stillness or being in the
moment or a slower passage of.
life, but I have to say I'm an incredibly busy person. I have a real problem with that.
I don't want to pretend like I'm the Buddha here. And I do find I'm always thinking about the future
and just, you know, the proverbial say not to do, be in the moment.
Becca, sorry to get morbid here for a second, but like the idea of living in the moment,
it makes me think about the moment when all your moments end, you know? Oh, no. And if you read
about the things that people say on their deathbeds at the end of their lives,
a lot of those sentiments have to do with regret,
with things that those people are happy that they did or things they wished they'd done.
A few years ago in a story for The Atlantic,
the writer Michael O'Rard explained how the dying often used these like metaphors of travel
to talk about their impending deaths,
like just trying to make sense of what's happening to them.
Wow.
Yeah, oh, the sentiment, like, if I could just find the map, I'd know where to go next.
Like, the way I understand that, that sentiment is that, like, even at the end of life when you know there's no more moments left and there's no choice but to face the forward flow of time into oblivion, people still haven't, they still haven't fully come to terms of it.
They're still yearning to go back to make changes or take comfort in the fact that they can't go back and make changes, but they recognize that pull or that tension, you know,
My own sort of fascination with the social clock stuff, I think, came from a similar yearning to turn back the clock and make the changes to my life that would, you know, put me in line with what I should have done.
And that's the scary time thing, right, Ian?
Like, we're all coping with that fact in different ways, realizing that no action, no sort of doing anything can turn back the clock.
Almost everything else we do involves going back to some capacity as well.
Editing an email before we send it, revising a text.
You know, we can kind of do everything forwards and backwards to elicit like a different result.
Time is just this sort of train I feel like I'm on that's moving along, you know, without my consent.
And I just have to be okay with that.
Yeah, that's what Jan is saying.
You're on the train.
You're on the train, Becca.
It's like the constant tragedy of time that you from 10 years ago will never return.
Neither will you from yesterday.
But it's also like the great comfort of time.
Time allows change to happen.
It allows you to change.
I very much feel part of a vast ecosystem going back to the Big Bang.
I really remember learning that.
And I remember being floored at the idea that there are out.
in my body that are primordial.
And of course, many people say, you know,
we're made of star dust,
and some of that primordial material went through stars
and had to be cast back out in the universe
and are in my body right now from a star.
And I know that that's something
lots of people know now and talk about,
but there are times where, yes,
I can suspend the feeling of that being
just an intellectual fact
and actually feel a real sense of comfort.
for that there will be a future where we will all be part of that larger ecosystem again.
Okay, well, speaking of being part of that larger ecosystem, I mean, it's almost like a
euphemism for a difficult topic that we nevertheless have to talk about, which is that if time
is change, you know, part of the change that we experience as human beings is death.
Like, we're going to die someday, or even before that, you know, my kids will grow up and leave
the house and they won't be around anymore. Do physicists have something to say about that,
about how humankind can grapple with our minor role in the universe? And you're kind of
touching on that with your own personal experience, but is there something in physics that
gives us clues about how to live without checking out or without falling into existential despair?
That's a very difficult question, but I have already left behind a part of myself. That's
that will never exist again.
There will never be seven-year-old me again.
There might be some deep sense in which that does exist seven-year-old me.
It's just not one of the movie frames I can make my way back to.
There are all these deaths along the way.
I have children and they'll never be babies again.
It will never hold my little babies.
And I think that when we kind of see it that way,
and we begin to ask, well, what does it mean?
to be me. I left so much of that behind him. Am I still the same person? I mean, these are
philosophical questions. I think you're wondering, what does a physicist have to say about that?
I think it's really going to sound quite difficult, but the physicist is likely to go as far as to say
there really is no self. You are a collection of quantum particles and interactions, and they
change. And we see this all the time. I certainly could take a chemical that would completely change
my chemistry and completely change my personality. In what sense, am I still me? I could have an
injury to my brain and the tissue is reoriented and reconfigured. In what sense is that still me?
And in what sense was it ever me? We are just a collection of particles. And one day we will go back
into the galaxy.
So what then is the purpose or value
of your and my time on Earth in that context?
Well, this is back to taking
that astronomical view of the Earth
and why people are so stirred by
things like the International Space Station
taking a photograph of the Earth rising,
Earthrise.
I believe it helps us to understand
that so much that we take so seriously is completely devoid of any meaning.
And most of all, this kind of notion of our differences, I think, has been kind of historically
catastrophic.
To think of all of us in this way can be transcendent and it can be quite unifying.
And I think it's okay to still say, I really love the color green.
even if I believe it's only in my mind.
I can live with that.
I can sit with that.
Jen, I have one last question for you.
In a sentence, how do you define time?
One last question that people have been wringing their hands over for centuries
and will for centuries to come.
I, if forced, I would say, to the best of my present understanding,
time is a measure of change.
And I'm very unsatisfied with that answer.
I almost should be more rebellious and say, I can't do that, and I don't want to do that.
Because if I were to do that, I'd be saying something so tricky.
So, for instance, it would be very easy for me to argue with that.
statement and say, well, what do you mean change? Change happens over time. We're caught in a little loop.
I could say something like time is a dimension, but it's a dimension that has an arrow where you're
forced to always move in a particular direction. So it's a dimension just like north, south, east,
west, up and down, spatial dimension. But it has this weird restriction that I can only move in one
direction in that dimension. Why does it have the era of time? Well, that is a hotly debated topic
that will continue to go on. But some scientists, some cosmologists feel a lot more comfortable
now saying things like, oh, that's just because in the early universe, things were in a very
ordered state. And so the only place it can go is to become more and more disordered. And so time
passes. That if the universe began in a maximally
disordered state, just a blender of everything was maximally randomized, that there would be no
passage of time. There also wouldn't be galaxies or people or radio shows or thoughts. So some people
feel very confident that it's a cosmological question. The question is, why did the universe
begin in such an ordered state? That's the big mystery. That's all for this episode of How to Keep Time.
This episode was hosted by Ian Bogost and me, Becca Rashid.
I also produced the show.
Our editors are Claudina Bade and Jocelyn Frank.
Fact-checked by Anna Alvarado.
Our engineer is Rob Smerciak.
Rob also composed some of our music.
The executive producer of audio is Claudina Bade,
and the managing editor of audio is Andrea Valdez.
Becca, I was going to tell you a joke about time travel, but you didn't like it.
What?
No, I didn't.
I don't.
I'm overly.
I didn't get the joke.
Oh, I get it, I get it, I get it.
I'm Ann Applebaum.
Over the past year, as I watched Donald Trump demand unprecedented new powers, I wondered,
don't he and his team fear that these same powers could one day be used by a different administration?
and a different president to achieve very different goals?
Well, maybe they are afraid.
And maybe that's why they're using their new tools
to change our institutions,
even to alter the playing field
in advance of midterm elections later this year,
to make sure their opponents can't win.
Ultimately, destroying trust is the currency of autocrats.
We could win, but we are very, very, very likely to lose
if we keep treating this as business as usual.
Reporting on the sweeping changes unfolding in our country
and preparing you to think about what might happen next.
The new season of Autocracy in America, available now.
