『Inertia』のカバーアート

Inertia

Inertia

著者: Rania Sutton
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Physics helps us understand how the world works. Philosophy asks why it matters. Inertia dives into their intersection, exploring the mechanics of reality and burning questions at the forefront of current academia. Each episode tackles one central question - but sprawls out into topics dating back centuries of persistent societal ideologies, all to better understand the tangled web of phenomena that makes up our universe. Whether you’re a science person, humanities person, or both - these mind-bending ideas and controversial theories will keep you thinking long after you finish these episodes.Rania Sutton 物理学 科学
エピソード
  • Episode 2: Time, Part Two
    2026/04/14

    Building from the last episode, Episode 2 of Inertia moves beyond the surface question of whether time exists to ask something more precise: if the universe is a static four-dimensional structure, why does it feel like it moves? We navigate the mechanics of this illusion by tracing the path from McTaggart’s logical paradoxes to the geometric reality of Minkowski spacetime, before confronting the "statistical" arrow of entropy and the microscopic leakage of quantum decoherence. The episode explores the Past Hypothesis and the "Mentaculus" to explain why we possess records of the past but none of the future, ultimately weighing whether human agency can survive the fixity of a block universe. By the end, we’re left with the realisation that the feeling of time passing is merely a specialised biological interface that allows a static world to feel alive.


    Music: LEMMiNO - Cipher

    CC BY-SA 4.0

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    31 分
  • Episode 1: Time
    2025/11/17

    Episode 1 of Inertia digs into a question that keeps resurfacing once you look at it closely: if relativity bends time, entropy pushes it forward, and quantum theory sometimes ignores it, what are we actually experiencing from one moment to the next? The episode follows this tension through the physics, then into the philosophical fallout, where eternalism, presentism, and McTaggart’s challenge raise doubts about whether the flow of time is anything more than a feeling. Princeton philosopher Joe Schmidt joins to unravel how these ideas collide with everyday assumptions about choice, responsibility, and what it means for a person to persist at all.


    Music: LEMMiNO - Cipher

    CC BY-SA 4.0

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    1 時間 5 分
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