Collapse-Induced Time Asymmetry and the Emergence of Classical Reality proposes a collapse-driven framework in which the emergence of classical definiteness and the arrow of time arise from the same underlying physical mechanism. Wavefunction collapse is treated as an intrinsic, irreversible process that progressively restricts the space of admissible quantum states, generating both temporal order and classical structure without reliance on observers, special boundary conditions, or externally imposed time asymmetry. The central contribution of this work is the introduction of an emergent collapse-ordering parameter, distinct from coordinate time, which indexes irreversible collapse events and provides a microscopic foundation for temporal asymmetry. Within this framework, stochastic localization resolves quantum indeterminacy, stabilizes macroscopic outcomes, and yields definite mass–energy configurations from which classical spacetime structure can emerge. Gravitational self-energy is reinterpreted not as the cause of collapse, but as a diagnostic of the energetic incompatibility between unrealized quantum alternatives. Collapse dynamics, entropy production, and geometric structure are shown to be mutually consistent aspects of a single irreversible process. The resulting picture unifies measurement resolution, the arrow of time, and classical emergence within a single collapse-based dynamical framework. This paper focuses on the theoretical structure and internal consistency of the proposed mechanism. A separate, accompanying repository paper will present proof-of-principle numerical simulations exploring collapse-driven information pruning, history-dependent backreaction, and emergent geometric behavior. These simulations are intended to illustrate qualitative features of the framework and to demonstrate dynamical stability and repeatability, rather than to provide quantitative gravitational modeling. Together, the theoretical analysis and forthcoming simulation results aim to clarify the physical role of collapse in the emergence of classical reality and temporal order.
Brian J Davies (Sun,) studied this question.
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