
TL;DR
This review explores the multifaceted Problem of Time in quantum gravity, analyzing its eight principal facets and emphasizing relationalism, approach classification, and strategies for spacetime reconstruction.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive classification and strategic analysis of the eight main facets of the Problem of Time, emphasizing relationalism and approach ordering in quantum gravity.
Findings
Relationalism underpins the facets and strategies.
Classifying approaches by full ordering clarifies their differences.
Strategies like Patching and semiclassical methods are analyzed for spacetime reconstruction.
Abstract
The Problem of Time occurs because the `time' of GR and of ordinary Quantum Theory are mutually incompatible notions. This is problematic in trying to replace these two branches of physics with a single framework in situations in which the conditions of both apply, e.g. in black holes or in the very early universe. Emphasis in this Review is on the Problem of Time being multi-faceted and on the nature of each of the eight principal facets. Namely, the Frozen Formalism Problem, Configurational Relationalism Problem (formerly Sandwich Problem), Foliation Dependence Problem, Constraint Closure Problem (formerly Functional Evolution Problem), Multiple Choice Problem, Global Problem of Time, Problem of Beables (alias Problem of Observables) and Spacetime Reconstruction/Replacement Problem. Strategizing in this Review is not just centred about the Frozen Formalism Problem facet, but rather…
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