Ajasümmeetria
Ajasümmeetria, often translated as time asymmetry or the arrow of time, refers to the observation that physical processes occur in a particular direction in time. While the fundamental laws of physics at the microscopic level are largely time-symmetric, meaning they would behave the same if time ran backward, macroscopic phenomena exhibit a clear directionality. This is most famously exemplified by the second law of thermodynamics, which states that the entropy, or disorder, of an isolated system tends to increase over time. Processes like a dropped egg breaking or heat flowing from a hot object to a cold one are irreversible; they do not spontaneously reverse themselves.
Several hypotheses attempt to explain this observed time asymmetry. The most prominent is linked to the initial