The problem of temporal direction has long occupied both physics and philosophy. Many of our most successful formal descriptions of nature do not privilege one temporal orientation over the other. Yet the world as lived is not neutral. We remember the past and not the future. Causes precede effects. Organisms age. Records accumulate in one direction. Possibility resolves into actuality and does not spontaneously return to indeterminacy 1, 2. Standard accounts often explain this asymmetry by appeal to thermodynamics, cosmological boundary conditions, or quantum measurement 1, 2, 3. These approaches are powerful, but they often leave a deeper question unresolved: what grounds temporal direction in the first place? Why does reality present as ordered passage rather than mere reversible rearrangement? This paper advances a relational-structural answer, extending the framework developed in Parts I–IV of this series 4, 5, 6, 7. Time is not a container in which events occur, nor a universal flow external to the systems within it. Rather, time emerges as the parameterisation of ordered chains of dependency by bounded subsystems. The arrow 1of time is not an additional principle imposed upon such chains. It is the asymmetry of ordered dependency itself as experienced from within. The argument does not deny the importance of thermodynamic or cosmological arrows.It instead relocates their deeper grounding. The central claim is simple: the arrow of time is an emergent property of bounded observers traversing asymmetric dependency chains, and its direction is the direction of irreversible resolution of possibility into realised state.
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Malin Hess
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Malin Hess (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c2295caeb5a845df0d3b6d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19165118