Explore Science-first Philosophy

Does antimatter travel backward?

~ < 1 of audio

Does antimatter travel backward?

No, nothing is known to travel backward in time. However, when you search online, you’ll find answers like:

“Yes, antimatter is thought to behave like matter traveling backward in time. This concept is used in modern particle physics.”

Since this is not true, where does it come from? It comes from CPT symmetry, a fundamental theorem in quantum field theory that has never been violated in any experiment. It is mathematically proven and is one of the most fundamental symmetries in physics. However, all interpretations based on it remain speculative and irrational in the Idea of Ideas until confirmed by observation.

Richard Feynman’s diagrams for CPT symmetry explore the speculative idea that antimatter behaves as if it moves backward in time. This is a useful trick in equations, but it does not mean antimatter actually moves backward in reality. Math, much like words, can describe reality or fantasy.

This mistake falls into two logical fallacies: Equivocation and Cherry-Picking, both of which are forms of Linguistic Trickery, one of the Four Mind Traps in the TST Framework.

  • Equivocation: People confuse mathematical descriptions with physical reality, treating a symbolic representation as if it is an observed fact. Just because antimatter behaves mathematically like it’s moving backward in time does not mean it actually does.
  • Cherry-Picking Fallacy: People focus on the most exciting interpretation of Feynman’s work while ignoring actual experiments, which consistently show antimatter moving forward in time just like normal matter.

Final Thought: This is a great example of why we need to think critically about science explanations. Just because something works in an equation doesn’t mean it’s literally true in nature. Remember, science is about testing ideas, not just believing clever math.


That Critical Thinking FAQ, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.
This tidbit is part of the broader TST project.
Timelines, quotes, FAQs, and short explanations function as research anchors — designed to be reused, cross-linked, and updated as better evidence emerges.

The end!

Scroll to Top