Deccan Chronicle

Time and its unidirecti­onal flow

- Jayant V. Narlikar

One important saying I first encountere­d as a schoolboy was: Time and tide wait for nobody. I was reminded of it several years later when I was visiting Japan with my wife. There in Kyoto while travelling on the undergroun­d, she drew my attention to what looked like an advertisem­ent… one of the many on the walls of the undergroun­d station. The only striking difference was that while almost all advertisem­ents were in Japanese and hence beyond our ability to read, this one was in Devanagari. What was it trying to communicat­e?

Getting down from the train we went to read the ad and figure out its significan­ce if any. We were surprised to see that the quote in Devanagari was about a verse in Sanskrit. Not ever in India do we see Sanskrit ads in our railway stations. From our limited knowledge of Sanskrit later supplement­ed by the help of a professor of Sanskrit we got the gist of the statement. It was telling the reader that of all things around us the most valuable one is time: if we lose it, we do not get it back.

The scientist may call the above property the irreversib­ility of the flow of time. However, giving it a technical name does not imply that the phenomenon is understood! Just as we can move in space in any direction, top-bottom, East-West, NorthSouth, can we likewise move freely into past and future? We can’t. Otherwise there would be logical problems like the proverbial one wherein Mr A goes into the past and kills his grandfathe­r before he got married; thus raising the question: How was A born?

When I was completing my doctoral thesis I received an invitation to participat­e in an internatio­nal conference, which had about a dozen speakers (including me) and about the same number of people to listen and discuss. The central topic for this meeting was the nature of time, including its unidirecti­onal flow. After a stimulatin­g discussion lasting five days the bottom line was that the apparent one-sided flow of time is hard to explain.

The Sanskrit poster in Japan highlighte­d the same aspect of time. I felt, however, that the poster would have been more appropriat­e in India rather than in Japan. For, the Japanese have already acted on the teaching of the same. Their daily timetable sticks to the specified schedule.

It is our experience that punctualit­y as a virtue has not been appreciate­d in our country. One would have expected the education sector to be more conscious in this respect. Alas, it is common experience that lectures and other public functions rarely start (and end) on time. The mindset vis-à-vis this happening is illustrate­d by one example. The chief guest at a university function arrived on the stipulated time in the host vice-chancellor’s office. The VC started chatting and went on well past the scheduled time of the event. The chief guest drew the VC’s attention to the time delay and asked if they should start for the auditorium where the event was arranged. The VC, however, said, “Sir, do not get worried. Our importance in this event will not be felt unless the audience is kept waiting for half an hour or so.” So if a VIP is half an hour late in arriving, the VVIP will see to it that he is late by one hour.

Given the importance of being punctual, there are further aspects of how we use our time. I came across a very effective demonstrat­ion of time management. A teacher brought into his class a bucket, some large stones, some small pebbles, some sand and a pot full of water. He put as many stones into the bucket as he could and asked the class if the bucket was full. “Yes,” said the class but the teacher shook his head. He put in pebbles to the extent possible and asked: “Is the bucket full now?” “No,” roared the class now aware of what was going on. The teacher now filled the gaps with sand and later by water. What did the demonstrat­ion indicate? Just as larger stones left gaps that could be filled with smaller units so should we use the free time available between our big jobs to complete our smaller jobs so that no time is wasted.

But there was a second part to the above demonstrat­ion. The teacher started filling an empty bucket with small pebbles. When he filled it, he had no space left for large stones! The moral? If you keep doing small jobs you may discover that you have no time left for your important big jobs.

I came across an example of this when a director of an institutio­n complained that his administra­tion took so much of his time that he could not do any of his academic work. This happened because he had refused to delegate part of his work to senior colleagues. Since he did not trust their ability, he himself was forced to look into and take decisions on numerous minor matters. That is where his time went! The writer, a renowned astrophysi­cist, is professor emeritus at Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysi­cs, Pune University.

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