Time as Superposition: How Observation Collapses the Present

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Abstract

This paper proposes that time behaves not as a continuous stream but as a quantum superposition of possible moments that collapse into a single present through observation. The theory draws from quantum field models and wavefunction-based mathematics to argue that time carries amplitudes and interference effects much like spatial quantum states. Instead of treating time as a passive background, the model treats it as a measurable quantity that reacts to attention and resolution. Moreover, it integrates thought experiments, proposed physical tests using time-bin qubits and optical clocks, and theoretical links to entropy, consciousness, and metaphysics. It stays within the framework of relativity and standard quantum mechanics while offering a shift in how time is involved in measurement and reality formation. It suggests that the “now” does not exist until something observes it, and each observation activates one real version of time while excluding all others. Because of this, the paper calls for a new view of time—not as something flowing on its own but as a quantum variable that becomes real only through interaction.

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