Physics will never be able to prove the past is infinite, all it can possibly do is to show that no past boundary of time has been found. — Relativist
My argument is in the spirit of David Conway’s, in that I utilize the concept of completeness. However, Smith’s refutation doesn’t apply to my argument. — Relativist
How can an infinity of days become completed? — Relativist
the collection of events cannot add up to an infinite collection in a finite amount of time, but they do so add up in an infinite amount of time. And since it is coherent to suppose that in relation to any present an infinite amount of time has elapsed, it is also coherent to suppose that in relation to any present an infinite collection of past events has already been formed by successive addition. — Smith, Infinity and the Past
I’m not making the bold claim that an infinite past is logically impossible, I simply claim that there’s no conceptual basis for considering it POSSIBLE, and therefore it’s more rational to reject it. — Relativist
Personally, I would not refer to time as measured by a clock as "physical time". I would call it "clock time" or some such. Time as measured by a clock is stochastic. It only follows from the second law of thermodynamics, which is not fundamental law. It doesn't even make an assertion that is true in all possible worlds that have the same fundamental law as ours. And that have a Bug Bang.
There is a possible world where my fair coin has always come up heads, even though I have tossed it a quadrillion times. Likewise, there is a possible world in which my pocket watch has always run backwards, without being broken in any way. — Douglas Alan
The fact that clocks are not reliable in all possible worlds, or after the heat death of the universe leads me to exactly the opposite conclusion: We should not be making any profound metaphysical conclusions at all based on clock time. We should stick to relativistic time. — Douglas Alan
Two percent isn't low. I'd say flu's 0.1% is low. — Michael
And yet, if space is finite, it's contents are finite - which would entail some upper bound. Current physics indicates that space, and its contents, extends in space through a temporal process (described here). This means the extent can only be unbounded if the past is unbounded (which the article also states). — Relativist
It's been a long time since I studied special relativity (we spent several weeks on it in Physics 101), but IIRC, relativity doesn't provide a forward and reverse direction of time. It just provides two directions of time, and they are symmetric. — Douglas Alan
I don't see the problem. There are two directions of time. Neither of these directions of time ever changes. The only thing that might change is which direction of time is pointing towards greater entropy could change. But the direction is not changing. Only what is in that direction might change. — Douglas Alan
You are not addressing the problem. What part of the universe you could not potentialy see on your monitor? You can either name what kind of object or information it is that your monitor can not visually convey, or you have to admit your monitor can convey any and every possible information. — Zelebg
The question is whether this encyclopedia of everything has infinite number of pages or not. The answer is no, because there is no reason why your monitor could not display any of those pages, and the number of pages your monitor can display is finite. — Zelebg
Faulty hypothesis — jgill
What do you make of it? — Zelebg
I’m not sure if you are saying there is a problem with my argument or not. If there is, point to which statement of mine is supposed to be unwarranted. — Zelebg
Alas, I'm not sure where the confusion is arising. If you believe that GR entails eternalism, the forward direction of time is given straight-forwardly by the direction of increasing entropy. (Modulo situations in which there is no such clear direction, such as post-heat death of the universe. But since there won't be philosophers existing then to worry about the problem or to experience what it is like to live in this time, this would seem to be moot to an eternalist.) — Douglas Alan
The argument is simply that relativity of simultaneity isn't sufficient by itself to imply a block universe. An additional premise is required, which is that all events to the past of any observer's surface of simultaneity are fixed and certain. — Andrew M
There is a significant difference between full color, grayscale, and a picture that can only show black / white pixels. It doesn’t follow ‘there are only two distinct things in the universe’ from the ability to ‘encode all the information in the universe with a digital dataset’. You are obfuscating delimiters between different binary strings encoding many different things. What follows is just that any information can be encoded with a minimal set of only two bits, nothing more follows. — Zelebg
This is more evidence for eternalism if you ask me. E.g., why is it that "metaphysical time" just happens to agree with the arrow of time placed by the direction of increased entropy? What a fortunate coincidence, since it would be a crazy world otherwise.
For eternalism, there is no problem here.
On the other hand, I guess presentists could just say that the world had a 50/50 chance, and fortunately, it came up heads. — Douglas Alan
I think you're just saying that relativity doesn't entail an arrow of time, nor is it dependent on there being one. Nevertheless, relativity is consistent with there being an arrow of time. Relativity is not a theory of everything. — Relativist
The article, instead of providing anything that might actually give me some insight into the answer, just provides a lot of history. Okay, history can be interesting. But I'd prefer actual insight to a long exposition on many failed attempts. — Douglas Alan
I did some skimming of the references you provided that were actually available to me. One thing I noted that was of interest is that in a closed timelike curve, there can be no consistent entropy gradient that gives time its forward arrow. If there were such a gradient, you couldn't return in the loop to the same point in space-time, since that point must have the same entropy, and consequently it wouldn't be a closed curve. It seems that this would make traveling around one unpleasant. But, I suppose if it were large enough, you could refrain from going all the way around the loop, and I suppose there could be a gradient that does not change direction in the part that you stay on. Well, this is probably neither here nor there for this discussion, but I found it an interesting worry. — Douglas Alan
In what sense do virtual or real particles live outside the mathematical equations? — MathematicalPhysicist
But what's the relationship between the block universe (a physical model) and the metaphysical interpretation of time? — Echarmion
To my limited understanding, Einstein based his theory of Relativity on the idea that we live in a block universe. — christian2017
I've presented a thought experiment where a million people use a closed timelike curve to all travel to different times. As far as I understand things, these types of thought experiments are generally taken by physicists to entail eternalism, assuming GR is true enough that closed timelike curves are actually possible. — Douglas Alan
I went to a Philosophy conference at MIT filled to the brim with professional philosophers. In one of the talks, the moving spotlight theory was given a quick refutation as part of the argument. Here's a longer discussion. Though this author actually defends the moving spotlight theory as not being incompatible with Special Relativity:
https://web.mit.edu/bskow/www/research/timeinrelativity.pdf
There was Q&A after the talk. Not a single philosopher spoke up to question the implicit eternalism that was presented, nor to support the moving spotlight theory. My natural conclusion is that eternalism is not hugely controversial. Or at least not amongst the philosophers who might come to MIT for a conference. — Douglas Alan
Although it seems that most philosophers who take a position on the matter are B‐theorists, nevertheless, A-theorists have made up a significant proportion of the metaphysicians actually working on the A‐theory–B‐theory debate during the past ten or fifteen years. We A‐theorists might be inclined to explain this as a case in which the balance of opinion among the experts diverges from that of the hoi polloi. There is an alternative explanation, however. I have the impression that there is a much larger proportion of incompatibilists (about free will and determinism) among those actually writing on free will than among philosophers more generally. A similar phenomenon may be at work in both cases: The B‐theory and compatibilism are regarded as unproblematic, perhaps even obviously true, by a majority of philosophers; they seem hardly worth defending against the retrograde views of A‐theorists and incompatibilists. Philosophers sympathetic to A‐theories or incompatibilism, on the other hand, are more likely to be goaded into defending their views in print precisely because they feel their cherished doctrines are given short shrift by most philosophers. — Dean Zimmerman, Presentism and the Space‐Time Manifold[/url], The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Time (2011)
As for who is better equipped to address such questions, I don't consider philosophers better equipped than scientists. — Douglas Alan
This assertion is false in General Relativity. In GR, all of space-time exists forever. The past still exists and the future already exists. In GR time is kind of like space. My father died when I was young, but in GR, he's still there, just at a different location in time than I am. It's kind of like he's in California, only in time there's less freedom of movement than there is in space. So, while my father is alive and well in California (or actually 1969), I just can't get to California from where I am currently located.
In GR, I am not located below my feet or above my head, and likewise, I am not located before I was born or after I die. But I exist always between the bottom of my feet and below the top of my head and for the time between when I was born and before I die. — Douglas Alan
Let me be more clear with a more specific example. Let's say that we build or find a closed timelike loop. And now let's say that we have a million people traverse this timelike loop, but traverse it differently so that they all end up in different times in the past. And at each of these times, let's say that each of these million people is causally connected to billions of other people.
So, we now have a million different people who were here earlier today but are now spread across the past. Did they cease to exist? Or do only the locations surrounding these million people exist in spacetime? What about all the billions of people that are causally connected to them?
I'm sure that someone could come up with some crazy explanation for this which doesn't entail eternalism, but it sure to be ad hoc and completely violate Ockham’s razor. — Douglas Alan
I've presented a thought experiment where a million people use a closed timelike curve to all travel to different times. As far as I understand things, these types of thought experiments are generally taken by physicists to entail eternalism, assuming GR is true enough that closed timelike curves are actually possible.
Though even Special Relativity makes presentism difficult to defend. See the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy for more details.
I went to a Philosophy conference at MIT filled to the brim with professional philosophers. In one of the talks, the moving spotlight theory was given a quick refutation as part of the argument. Here's a longer discussion. Though this author actually defends the moving spotlight theory as not being incompatible with Special Relativity:
https://web.mit.edu/bskow/www/research/timeinrelativity.pdf
There was Q&A after the talk. Not a single philosopher spoke up to question the implicit eternalism that was presented, nor to support the moving spotlight theory. My natural conclusion is that eternalism is not hugely controversial. Or at least not amongst the philosophers who might come to MIT for a conference.
In any case, eternalism is a simple and natural explanation for what happens in the thought experiment. It is also in my experience how virtually all scientists who talk about GR, talk about GR.
I consider eternalism prima facie true, assuming the thought experiment is actually possible.
I think that anyone who wants to reject eternalism without rejecting the possibility of this thought experiment has a lot of work to do! And I find it highly improbable that whatever theory is presented as an alternative would be widely accepted as more likely.
As for who is better equipped to address such questions, I don't consider philosophers better equipped than scientists. Particle physicists used to consider virtual particles just a mathematical convenience, rather than virtual particles being real. Now virtual particles are universally accepted as real. I don't consider philosophers to be better equipped than particle physicists to determine the metaphysical status of virtual particles wrt existence, and in the unlikely case that philosophers come to a different conclusion than physicists on this issue, I would most likely side with the physicists. — Douglas Alan
If the rare earth hypothesis is correct, it means that intelligent life like us is extremely rare. If that's true, we inhabit a very special place in this universe. Since out current sample size of "intelligent life like us" is 1, we have no reason to assume we're in such a special place. The mediocrity principle implies that we should regard our habitable situation as "average". The rare earth hypothesis violates that. It claims our habitable conditions are/were exceptionally NOT average. Is there a good justification for this? — RogueAI
I did watch a documentary about the camps and it didn't appear that their culture was being extinguished, but rather that education was aimed at integrating them into a Chinese ideology. — Punshhh
That is exactly right. — CommonSense
None of what I said was intended to follow mathematical rules. The terms were meant in a broad sense, to illustrate my points. — DingoJones
That's not traveling; that's waiting. — Douglas Alan
Let's consider intellectual validation a subset of social validation, and social validation a necessary precursor to survival. If an arguer seeks intellectual validation in a rational discussion, aren't those efforts to argue automatically rendered irrational, because the desire for acceptance is an animalistic feature? — even
We can know things only
* as they are related to us
* under our forms of perception and understanding
* insofar as they fall under our conceptual schemes,
etc.
So,
we cannot know things as they are in themselves. — James Franklin, Stove's Discovery of the Worst Argument in the World (2002)
That is my point. That is the essence of nothing. That is the the logical basis of the conclusion all will be as if it never was. — CommonSense
The problem with most words is that they are consciously or unconsciously "tensed". If you look at the mereological existence of someone who is conscious the word exists is used by me as equivalent to not conscious - conscious - not conscious. Someone who does not exist, is not conscious, does not have a past that is their past, a past they are aware of. — CommonSense
My argument is that it is far more rational to believe in the possibility (not certainty) of a non-physical existence after physical death than it is to make something out of nothing - to argue for existential meaning in a purely physical existence. — CommonSense
I carefully explain the reasoning behind this conclusion in the Something Out of Nothing book — CommonSense