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Physicist Neil degrasse reveals the most shocking truth about time: it doesn't flow. The relentless sensation of moving from past through present into future—the most fundamental aspect of daily experience—is an illusion. Time, as physics describes it, bears almost no resemblance to time as we experience it. Einstein's relativity gives us the block universe: a static four-dimensional structure where past, present, and future all exist equally, eternally, unchangingly. Your entire life from birth to death exists as a complete worldline threading through spacetime. The flow you experience is an artifact of how consciousness processes information, not actual movement through time. There is no universal "now." Simultaneity is relative—what counts as "happening right now" depends on your motion. Events simultaneous for you aren't simultaneous for someone moving differently. Right now, someone moving at high speed past Earth considers events on a distant planet that are in your future to be in their present. There's no objective division of spacetime into past, present, and future—these categories are observer-dependent like "left" and "right." If there's no universal present moment, what's flowing? The fundamental equations of physics—Newton's laws, Maxwell's equations, Einstein's equations, Schrödinger's equation—contain no "now," no flow, no arrow of time. They work equally well running forward or backward. The thermodynamic arrow (entropy increase) gives us a direction, but this is statistical, not fundamental—a consequence of special initial conditions near the Big Bang, not a necessary feature of time itself. Our experience of an open future versus fixed past is also illusion. In the block universe, the future is just as determined as the past. Your entire worldline already exists in the four-dimensional structure. Everything you will ever do is already there, just as everything you've done is there. Quantum randomness doesn't necessarily help—randomness isn't the same as freedom. Time dilation proves time isn't universal. GPS satellites, astronauts, particles in accelerators—all experience time passing at different rates depending on motion and gravity. How can time "flow" at different rates? Flow relative to what? The block universe explains this naturally: spacetime is four-dimensional geometry where different paths have different proper time lengths. Neil exposes the deepest mystery: if the block universe is correct, where does the "now" come from? Why do we experience one moment at a time? Why does consciousness seem to move through a static structure? This "problem of temporal experience" has no satisfactory solution. Every moment in your worldline contains the experience "now it's [that moment]"—all equally real, none objectively special. Backward time travel might be possible—general relativity allows closed timelike curves mathematically. But this creates grandfather paradoxes. Solutions require either Novikov self-consistency (the universe conspires to prevent paradoxes), many-worlds (you travel to parallel timelines), or chronology protection (unknown physics forbids backward time travel). We don't know which is correct. At the Big Bang, time itself began—there is no "before" because time is part of spacetime structure. But quantum gravity might reveal time is emergent from something more fundamental. At heat death, does time end when nothing changes? Can time exist without change? We don't know because we don't understand time's fundamental nature. The block universe doesn't eliminate free will or meaning. Your choices determine what your worldline is—what pattern exists in four-dimensional reality. Temporal finitude makes moments precious. Your worldline exists eternally in spacetime structure even though it has finite duration from your perspective. Time is stranger than we imagine, and we don't fully understand it. But we exist in it, experience it, create meaning within it—and that's real.