慶應義塾大学学術情報リポジトリ(KOARA)KeiO Associated Repository of Academic resources

慶應義塾大学学術情報リポジトリ(KOARA)

Home  »»  Listing item  »»  Detail

Detail

Item Type Article
ID
AN00150430-00000105-0001  
Preview
Image
thumbnail  
Caption  
Full text
AN00150430-00000105-0001.pdf
Type :application/pdf Download
Size :1.5 MB
Last updated :Oct 5, 2010
Downloads : 583

Total downloads since Oct 5, 2010 : 583
 
Release Date
 
Title
Title Time's Arrow  
Kana  
Romanization  
Other Title
Title  
Kana  
Romanization  
Creator
Name 西脇, 与作  
Kana ニシワキ, ヨサク  
Romanization Nishiwaki, Yosaku  
Affiliation 慶應義塾大学文学部  
Affiliation (Translated)  
Role  
Link  
Edition
 
Place
東京  
Publisher
Name 三田哲學會  
Kana ミタ テツガクカイ  
Romanization Mita tetsugakukai  
Date
Issued (from:yyyy) 2000  
Issued (to:yyyy)  
Created (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Updated (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Captured (yyyy-mm-dd)  
Physical description
 
Source Title
Name 哲學  
Name (Translated)  
Volume  
Issue 105  
Year 2000  
Month 12  
Start page 1  
End page 33  
ISSN
05632099  
ISBN
 
DOI
URI
JaLCDOI
NII Article ID
 
Ichushi ID
 
Other ID
 
Doctoral dissertation
Dissertation Number  
Date of granted  
Degree name  
Degree grantor  
Abstract
Our cards model shows two world-views, but as far as we look at the sequence constructed, we can't see them. By making a ring with any sequence constructed in a cards model, we can represent two different time series in terms of two opposite directions of the ring rotation. Using this device, we can restate the thermodynamic discussions. In our ring model classical reversibility and recurrence are described concretely. As a result, ensemble interpretation is shown to be independent from the causal process of events. It shows us some properties, which can't be seen when only the causal process of a system is studied, but at the same time it hides some properties that the process has. In order to retrodict a past state of a system, we can use its time evolution conversely in classical mechanics. There is no such method in statistical mechanics. Hence, usually a certain past state of a system is assumed first and then we observe whether it evolves to the present state. But this is question-begging. If we reconsider this assumption and think of the direction of time in the light of empirical confirmation, the real problem is the confirmation under the assumption that time has a direction. There are two arguments about this. One says that the confirmation of the direction of time is possible. The other says it is impossible. This confusion is due to the interpretation of the proposition; "time has a direction," If you want to confirm which direction time has, then its confirmation is impossible. But if you want to confirm the direction which time already has, it is possible.
 
Table of contents

 
Keyword
 
NDC
 
Note
投稿論文
 
Language
日本語  
Type of resource
text  
Genre
Journal Article  
Text version
publisher  
Related DOI
Access conditions

 
Last modified date
Oct 05, 2010 09:00:00  
Creation date
Oct 05, 2010 09:00:00  
Registerd by
mediacenter
 
History
 
Index
/ Public / Faculty of Letters / Philosophy / 105 (200012)
 
Related to