Of particular importance is the past (before) in the sense that for any given moment in time, we can always inquire "and before that?" This line of questioning is an ad infinitum process as must be clear to you by now. — TheMadFool
If so, time must be extend to infinity into the past for there seems to be no real reason, at least I can't think of any, not to ask, "and before that?" Now, if time is real then it implies an infinite past but the universe is in the present moment as I write this. In other words, the universe has experienced, gone through, infinite time. But, infinity can't be experienced for, by its very nature, it can't be completed and if the past is infinite as it must be (if time is real) then that would imply a completed infinity. This only because we assumed time is real, an aspect of reality the mind didn't invent. Ergo, time is not real. — TheMadFool
I was approaching it from the perspective of a queue, a line, as it were. Two trees would always form a line, a straight one but that's beside the point. The two trees can be viewed to be a sequence in terms of relative distance from X, the closer one being first and the farther one being second. A queue, a line of trees?! Ordering in space?! What are your thoughts on that? — TheMadFool
Too, there's a sense in which the two trees are at the same time just as a queue can form at 12:00 AM but there's a first person and a second person in the queue. I suppose the idea is to force X to think about an aspect of reality different from space. — TheMadFool
Care to expand on this a bit? What means you by "arbitrary", "subjective", and "objective passing of time"? As far as I'm concerned, all I want to achieve is to construct a plausible theory on the origins of the concept of time. I think secondary features like "subjectivity", "objectivity" come later and can be safely ignored. Unless, of course, you feel that they're relevant in which case you'd need to give me more to go on. — TheMadFool
Do vague platitudes count as lies or truths? Vague platitudes is the language of politicians and lawyers. When you learn how to twist words to mean almost anything, then you can always assert plausible deniability later. — Harry Hindu
A discussion on space seems necessary first. Imagine X, an early human, trekking through the African savannah. The savannah are vast stretches of grassland with a few scaterred trees here and there. So, X, walks and comes across a tree, no fruits but still a tree. Then he continues along for another mile or so and then he encounters another tree - this one has fruits. In essence, he's met two trees and assuming he knew how to count up to two - it's said that early math began with the ability to count up to two - and assuming he was capable of ordinal math [the ability to order, sequence, as like first, second, etc.], X would've ordered the trees as such: first tree, no fruits; second tree, fruits. This ordering, this sequencing, must be contextualized, it requires a...dimension. The dimension in which the trees are first and second is space. — TheMadFool
However, the tree and the fruits haven't moved at all - they were there, they're still where they were. Ergo, X concludes, the sequence/order has nothing to do with space. In what context is the order/sequence of the fruits' condition occuring? In other words, in which dimension is the order/sequence of the ripening of the fruits taking place? Time. X has now developed the concept of time. — TheMadFool
Democrats lie. Republicans lie. Thinking one does it more than another is just a reflection of your indoctrination. — Harry Hindu
I have regained faith in humanity. — NOS4A2
Wealth allows one access to quality foods, preventative health regimes (exercise programs, equipment, etc), adequate housing, clothing, as well as allowing restorative downtime. — Book273
I assume these descriptors would be based on the perspective of society, rather than on those committing said actions? — Book273
I seek specific clarification of subjective terms as I have been gifted (my perspective on it anyway) with a profound ability to not relate to societies accepted norms. I understand that they are accepted norms, I just have no idea why, so I ask what are often perceived to be offense questions. They are not meant to be offensive, but to allow a greater understanding of another's perspective. — Book273
Define " Moral responsibility" please. I would like your definition as I am curious regarding what it encompasses. Thanks. — Book273
It's an interesting experiment, how so many people will give up moral responsibility at the drop of a hat, for the sake of insignificant pleasure. It seems like if one individual person does not follow the rules, for the sake of "freedom", then the next will see this transgression as an excuse not to follow the rules, quickly producing a cascade, until a large portion of society falls into that hole. Monkey see monkey do. — Metaphysician Undercover
Low socio-economic status results in a generally less healthy lifestyle
...
The poor are always hit harder than the wealthy. — Book273
Define " Moral responsibility" please. I would like your definition as I am curious regarding what it encompasses. Thanks. — Book273
These do not look probable to change, in terms of random deviations in a non-biased model, with the remaining votes in question (though it is possible). — boethius
Well Trump's gonna contest the results in with his 6-3 SCOTUS and hopes they're as eager to dismantle democracy as he is. If enough people think he actually won then he thinks he could get away with it. — Mr Bee
I would say your experience consists only of some present. Your memories and expectations are experienced in the present, and they don't necessarily reflect accurately what you did experience in the past or what you will experience in the future. — leo
Well what if all moments in time exist concurrently, and we only see a tiny portion of it as we're traveling along? — leo
Of course the idea that people don't say who they are going to vote when polled is a genuine factor. — ssu
From our point of view we only experience a portion of the present, which is itself an extremely small part of all that it, was and ever will be. — leo
I would say an eternal, infinite consciousness would experience it all at once forever. — leo
Trouble is, your claims are without proportion. — tim wood
Of course there is a two o'clock, and with all the furniture that implies, and true and meaningful in its context for its purposes. — tim wood
If there was nothing eternal, then “nothing is eternal” would be eternal... — leo
This goes beyond statements. — leo
But when a physicist talks of "excitations" of a field that's a different matter, and one that is highly intriguing. — jgill
And in any case it started, so it must have started at some time. — tim wood
Step up and tell us what you mean! — tim wood
Or are you lost in Zeno-esque confusion. — tim wood
I can; I did. Ergo, you are wrong. — Banno
It's six o'clock. It is true that it is six o'clock.
Now, it's one past six. It is no longer true that it is six o'clock.
Sometimes truth changes. — Banno
The size and power the U.S. govt. has accumulated over the years and the way theyve handled that power as a means to divide us and pit us against each other is the greatest misdeed of them all. — Harry Hindu
Please dont call yourselves "progressives" if your voting for the old racist white guy that has been in power for nearly 50 years. Dont complain about systemic racism and white privilege and then go vote for the old racist white guy that has been in power for nearly 50 years. Dont expect anyone to take anything you say seriously when you do such things. — Harry Hindu
I know very little about quantum physics, even as a mathematician. Philosophical speculation may easily drift into Quantum Mysticism. I prefer to leave the subject to trained physicists, but I realize it's such fun to discuss it it's hard to resist. — jgill
However since retiring I have had time to consider other models such as "Relativity" and "Quantum Mechanics" and find myself increasingly drawn to the conclusion that Physics is a flawed mirror. One that we need to understand before we can move on and be at peace with both Science and ourselves. — Chris1952Engineer
I like that phrase "stimulus-independent thinking" - think about what you are doing and seeing and avoid absent minded thinking. — unenlightened
"I understand intellectually, but I cannot put it into practice," which means, really, that you do not understand. — Krishnamurti
As if you wouldnt be focused on Trump Jr. as evidence that Trump is incapable if Trump Jr. had a similar story being circulated. — Harry Hindu
if they're dead, then what we have is resurrection. — tim wood
Best I could tell he's a sincere guy who has learned and skillfully articulated some insightful ideas (very similar to JK). And then a bunch of people who want a leader gather around and start chanting, "You are holy, you are wise, you are our teacher, our leader" etc. And being human, who can resist? — Hippyhead
Another paper by Cramer (Foundations of Physics, 1973) specifically treating the arrow of time: — Kenosha Kid
However, there is an alternative approach which, while not in the mainstream
of contemporary theory, represents an effective way of preserving the intrinsic
time symmetry of the relativistically invariant wave equations and thereby
avoiding the ad hoc insertion of an arrow of time into the formalism. — John Cramer
But what happens? Typically all that happens by this process is that the person's self identity changes from something like "I am a smart person" or "I am a sad person" to something like "I am a holy person". Some see "holy" as being a more appealing identity than smart or sad, so such a process can be popular. — Hippyhead
Fart jokes wouldn't be helpful to such business agendas. — Hippyhead
Whatever the case may be, if there are two mathematically different universes then detection is when a trace effect is left on the interface between the two universes. But quantum time must be in the equations somewhere. — EnPassant
So, what is happening here is that an n-dimensional event in quantum spacetime is projected onto the surface of a 4-dimensional physical spacetime. Say n = 10. This means 6 dimensions of information are lost because a 10 dimensional event is compressed into 4 dimensions. — EnPassant
1) Understanding is made of thought.
2) Thought is the source of suffering. — Hippyhead
If I put it negatively, psychologically, I might say that the past is trauma, the present is pain, and the future is fear. Or in more neutral terms, the past is knowledge, the present is sensation, and the future is imagination. I would rather view the present as the container of past and future than the divider. The past as memory and record, the future as plan and intention, and habit the thread that joins them. — unenlightened
But what about 'quantum time'? If the mathematics that describe change in the quantum world are different from the mathematics of change in the physical world then are there not two (space)times? Quantum time and physical time? Are the mathematics of quantum change sufficiently different from relativity to justify the idea that quantum particles live in a different spacetime? — EnPassant
