[Krimel}
Why yes Ham I for one have thought about it quite a bit. It does not
hold up for two reasons. The earliest and easiest is thermodynamics. It
holds that time is not reversible. The reason is that the overall rise
in disorder over times means that energy dissipated as heat can not be
returned to its previous states of order.

[Ron]
Absolute versus Statistical reversibility
Thermodynamics defines the statistical behaviour of large numbers of
entities, whose exact behavior is given by more specific laws. Since the
fundamental laws of physics are all time-reversible,[1] it can be argued
that the irreversibility of thermodynamics must be statistical in
nature, that is, that it must be merely highly unlikely, but not
impossible, that a system will lower in entropy.-wiki

[Krimel]
Interesting that thermodynamics was the first non-classical theory. It
introduced both non-reversible time and probability into physics at the same
time and this was nearly a century before the advent of quantum mechanics.

In the mean time if you could find a way to reverse entropy that would
pretty much destroy all current economic systems wouldn't it?

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