Dear all,

The CamPoS (Cambridge Philosophy of Science) seminar series continues this 
Wednesday, 21 November, 1-2:30pm in HPS Seminar Room 2. Giovanni Valente 
(University of Pittsburgh) will give a talk entitled "Lanford's theorem and 
the emergence of irreversibility". The abstract is below.

All are very welcome, and we hope to see many of you there.

Best wishes,
Vashka

--

It has been a longstanding problem to show how the irreversible behaviour 
of macroscopic systems can be reconciled with the time-reversal invariance 
of these same systems when considered from a microscopic point of view. A 
result by Lanford (1975, 1976, 1981) shows that, under certain conditions, 
the famous Boltzmann equation, describing the irreversible behaviour of a 
dilute gas, can be obtained from the time-reversal invariant Hamiltonian 
equations of motion for the hard spheres model. In this talk, which is 
based on a joint work with Jos Uffink, I examine how and in what sense 
Lanford's theorem succeeds in deriving this remarkable result. Many authors 
have expressed different views on the question which of the ingredients in 
the theorem is the source of irreversibility. I claim that all such 
interpretations miss the target and I suggest an alternative solution to 
the problem of the emergence of irreversibility in Lanford's theorem.


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