There's a New Law of Nature — And It Changes Everything We Know About Life. Michael Wong - #546
Into the Impossible With Brian Keating
Brian Keating
4.7 • 1.1K Ratings
🗓️ 23 March 2026
⏱️ 69 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Well, first, to be just provocative, there's definitely life on Mars, right? We brought it there. Our rovers have hitchhikers on them. Microbial spores, right? They weren't completely sterilized. Not that the building blocks of life are found all over the universe. Maybe life is just made of the building blocks of the universe. We are literally generating an alien presence on our planet that co-evolves with us and was in some way spawned by us. |
| 0:22.6 | Today's guest comes bringing a provocative claim that we've been wrong all along and actually |
| 0:27.9 | that there's a second arrow of time. Michael Wong has come all the way from Washington, D.C., |
| 0:34.2 | where he works at the Carnegie. Is it the Carnegie Institute? |
| 0:38.7 | Carnegie Institution for Science. The institution for science, home of many great scientists.C. where he works at the Carnegie. Is it the Carnegie Institute? Carnegie Institution for Science. Home of many great scientists. What's the definition of time? How do you define time? |
| 0:43.3 | Oh my goodness. How do I define time? I don't know if I have a definition for time. I think that |
| 0:49.1 | time is, you know, some axis upon which we can start to make measurements and derive metrics |
| 0:58.0 | through to measure things as they change through time. I'm not a physicist by training. So, |
| 1:03.3 | you know, maybe I should leave that to the physicist to define. Yeah, yeah. Well, I literally say things |
| 1:09.2 | like it's what a clock measures. I mean, that's effectively what physicists will say. |
| 1:12.6 | Yeah, yeah. |
| 1:13.6 | So I think, you know, time is essential because what the laws of nature try to describe is change |
| 1:22.6 | through time, right? |
| 1:24.6 | If I apply a force to an object, how does its acceleration change in the future? |
| 1:30.8 | And there's a certain kind of change through time that we describe as evolution. And so our new |
| 1:37.1 | conjecture, our new postulated law of nature is a law of evolution, of evolving systems, |
| 1:43.1 | of changing patterning, order, diversity, |
| 1:47.2 | complexity in the universe that we see all around us and that we understand has occurred |
| 1:52.3 | since the Big Bang through the generation of heavier and heavier isotopes to more |
| 1:58.3 | and more complex molecules and minerals to planets, and then at least one planet in the |
| 2:04.7 | universe that has life. |
| 2:06.3 | And this is where the thread ties to myself and why I would be thinking about arrows in time |
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