• Infinity and Zero: do they exist?
    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

    I was talking about spatial extension. Simply put, if space is infinite, which seems plausible from what we know, and if the rest of it looks much like what we can see around us, which is very plausible, then there's your actual infinity (if by that you mean an infinite number of material objects).

    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

    You do not so much utilize the concept of completeness as just plug it in and expect it to do the work for you. Try to unpack the reasoning and you will see that it either does not apply or it begs the question against the existence of actual infinities.

    Smith does address the sort of argument that you are hinting at in his section VI:

    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

    (And he goes on to address Conway's and Craig's arguments in that vein.)

    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

    I fail to see the distinction that you are trying to draw here.
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    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 second law of thermodynamics gives a preferred overall direction for time, but the rate of time is established by any number of regular physical processes, such as the vibrations of a cesium atom, which are used for the standard atomic clock. It is the availability of such physical processes - plus an overall direction - that gives us time as we normally understand it in physical sciences. (A direction is still necessary to provide an order to the cycles of a physical process - otherwise you can't really say that this cycle occurred earlier or later than that cycle.) We can also talk about subjective psychological time and other kinds of time - these I distinguish from what I call physical time (or clock time, if you prefer). The coordinate time of the Minkowski or the Lorentzian manifold is one of the species of time that, I argue, is not identical to this generalized concept of physical time.

    The second law of thermodynamics may not be fundamental, in the sense that it is reducible to physics at a lower scale, but all you need for it to obtain is a non-equilibrium state - and then it becomes as inevitable as any fundamental law. Almost as inevitable. I take your point about it being statistical. But does this strike a blow against the idea that thermodynamics is essential to our understanding of time? I understand probability and statistics epistemically, so if you tell me that the probability of an outcome is 1 - 10-45 (that's the probability of a quadrillion coin tosses not all coming up heads), that's probably better than the confidence level of all our fundamental physics experiments combined.

    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

    I am with you, to a point: I am not big on metaphysics. I would rather confine myself to more modest phenomenological models.

    Note that when you object to thermodynamics playing any part in the definition of time on the grounds that other possible worlds with the same fundamental laws may not exhibit such thermodynamic asymmetry as is observed in our universe, you are already deep into metaphysical theorizing, perhaps without even realizing it.
  • Coronavirus
    Two percent isn't low. I'd say flu's 0.1% is low.Michael

    Two percent is about the same mortality rate as the Spanish flu (I don't know where the 20% figure came from), which killed about 30 million people by the time it ended. The coronavirus has a similar infection rate as the Spanish flu. However, as has been quoted here, its mortality may be overestimated, and its infection rate may go down as well if we make the best effort to contain it. But the "nothing to worry about" attitude certainly isn't going to help in that.
  • Infinity and Zero: do they exist?
    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

    The article says quite clearly, and more than once, that we don't know whether the universe is spatially finite or infinite. We can estimate a lower bound on its size, but not an upper bound. The simplest topology consistent with our observations at large scales is an infinite, flat space; this is what the most common current cosmological model posits (so-called FLRW model). However, there are also closed topologies that are consistent with the same observations.

    As for your conceptual anti-infinitist argument, this is an old and surprisingly persistent confusion. Quentin Smith had a nice analysis of this and several other such arguments in a 1987 paper Infinity and the Past.
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    @Luke didn't you go over this with noAxioms and others for ages and ages on the old forum? That did you no good: you are still stuck on this idea that there is no motion under eternalism. Do we need to flog this dead horse for 20 more pages? Why don't you give it a rest and find something else to argue about?
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    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

    You remember right, but that wasn't at issue - we've both acknowledged that this is the case. My point is that relativistic time is not identical to physical time (the time that physical clocks measure). There are at least two reasons to think so: First, it is an idealization that wasn't designed to perfectly track physical time. Second, we have specific examples - probable or at least possible - where relativistic time diverges from physical time.

    Why is this important? To bring this back to the original topic, a common argument for the B-theory and against the A-theory is that the theory of relativity, though it may not rule out the A-theory, does not offer any support for it either. The A-theory requires additional assumptions that are not part of SR or GR. The implicit thesis here is that we ought to base our theory of time on the theory of relativity and nothing else. But this thesis is weakened if the identity between relativistic time and physical time is weakened.
  • Simple proof there is no infinity
    How about instead of petulantly demanding answers to stupid questions you use your own head? You demand to know why a device like a monitor, camera or book can only store a limited amount of information. Did you already forget that this was the very premise of your stupid argument?

    Ugh, why do I even waste my time on this...
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    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

    The problem that I see here is that there is no inherent connection between the direction of time given by the time coordinate of the relativistic spacetime and the direction of time from the entropy gradient (which in turn is a proxy for physical time). Even if it so happens that in our universe these two never diverge, when you make a commitment to relativistic time, you are opening yourself to this contingency where your theory may diverge from reality.

    And in case of heat death, which is currently taken to be the most likely future of our universe, this is more than just a contingency. If the prognosis is right, then eventually relativistic time will diverge from physical time.

    So as a proxy for physical time, relativistic time is fine, most of the time, but it should not be taken to be identical with physical time, on pain of paradoxes.
  • Simple proof there is no infinity
    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

    If your monitor - or, say, any device or method for identifying distinct objects - can only register a limited number of objects, due to the way in which it is constructed, and you have registered that many objects, then all that you can say is that there exist at least that many distinct objects. This is the point that you fail to grasp.

    Suppose, for example, that your device can register only up to five distinct things, and suppose that the world has more than five distinct things. What conclusion do you draw from this: too bad for your device or too bad for the world?

    This idea, that your device or method can bias, limit or even fully determine what what you can observe is known as observation selection bias or observation selection effect.

    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

    Perhaps you will realize your mistake if you reduce the size of the page to the extreme (although a similar exercise with reducing the number of pixels on the monitor failed to convince you). If you only have one character on the page, and there are, say, 100 letters, digits and other signs that you can depict with one character, does this mean that there cannot be more than 100 distinct entities in the world?
  • Simple proof there is no infinity
    Faulty hypothesisjgill

    Well, no, the number of distinct digital photos of a given resolution is finite. But so what? He might as well have said: I am going to count the number of distinct things in the world using the fingers on my right hand. Let's see... Tree, house, shoe, smartphone... oops! Only one finger left - I better lump everything else into one remaining thing. There! The number of distinct things in the world is five!
  • Simple proof there is no infinity
    What do you make of it?Zelebg

    Well, first it is unclear what it is that you claim to have proven. The question you claim to answer is "How many distinct things can there be in the world?" But the answer will depend not only on how the world is, but also on how you cut it at its joints, so to speak: what kind of things are you looking for? Distinct geometrical shapes? Distinct species of animals? Distinct entities posited by fundamental physics? The answer to your question will depend on the chosen mereology, and here the problem is that a priori, without knowing anything about the world, we can hardly even decide on an appropriate mereology. And even if we do know something about the world, our idea of what the proper mereology ought to be can change as we learn more about it. On the other hand, with a trivial choice of mereology (e.g. "Everything is either Donald Trump or not Donald Trump") we can get a pretty good answer without doing any work at all.

    But the most glaring problem with your approach is that the answer to your inquiry is completely depended on your instrument of choice. If your instrument cannot register something, then that thing does not exist. If it cannot distinguish between two things, then they are the same thing. The result therefore is bogus: it tells you nothing about how the world really is, it just tells you about the limitations of your method.
  • Simple proof there is no infinity
    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

    Doesn't it bother you that the number of distinct things in the universe is limited by an arbitrarily chosen resolution of your camera? With an 800x600 24-bit pixel camera you can register at most ~8*1012 distinct things. If instead you used an 800x600 16-bit pixel you would register at most ~3*1010 distinct things. And with a 1x1 1-bit pixel camera you would register only 2 distinct things. Haw can this be?
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    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

    GR doesn't know anything about entropy - it's not part of the theory. For those who base their theory of time exclusively on GR - call them "relativity fundamentalists" - entropy is a stolen concept. They have to limit themselves to GR's coordinate time, which increases monotonically (in simply connected topologies), but in an arbitrarily chosen direction. Therefore, if it is possible for the entropy gradient to reverse itself along the length of one worldline, then a relativity fundamentalist faces a problem, because her theory of time is not sensitive to this change. Either she has to add something extra to the theory (which, incidentally, is what presentists do as well and for which they are criticized by fundamentalists), or she has to bite the bullet and say that the direction of time given by the entropy gradient can sometimes be wrong. (And then when is it right - and why?)

    In the less contentious heat death scenario physical time effectively disappears, since there are no physical clocks to mark its passage, but the coordinate time continues - another contradiction that can be solved by acknowledging that mathematical time is not identical with physical time.
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    I don't understand what your hangup is. "Static" is an unfortunate choice of a word in Miller's article, because it normally means that either there is no change over time or that time is not in the consideration, and neither of these common meanings are relevant here. But Miller says exactly what she means by the Static Thesis: it refers to the B-theory of time, according to which there is no objective partition of time into present, past and future; present, past and future are relational terms. But there is still time in the eternalist's account, just as in the presentist's!

    Here is a simple space-time diagram:

    f-d%3A77b6f677339f702c45eb1305439574dc253d0801b9d507170a37cb1e%2BIMAGE_THUMB_POSTCARD_TINY%2BIMAGE_THUMB_POSTCARD_TINY.1

    Both the presentist and the eternalist agree that the diagram depicts movement of a body through space. But the presentist adds that there is a fact of the matter about where on the diagram the body is right now, while the eternalist says that there is no such fact of the matter (not without reference to a specific observer). Nevertheless, the eternalist will agree with the presentist that the body is located at 10 m from the coordinate center at time 1 s and at 20 m at time 2 s, and that the difference constitutes a change in the body's position.
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    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

    But that would not be sufficient for a block universe either. Unless observers are spread throughout the entire spacetime, their past light cones sweep only part of it, resulting in a moving block. Which is why he adds the stipulation of all observers - meaning, apparently, the entire spacetime block. Which, of course, assumes the conclusion.

    And in any case, whether the argument is for a moving block or for the full block, nowhere does relativity do any work here. All you need, according to this argument, is the assumption that there are some observers for whom the past is fixed.
  • Simple proof there is no infinity
    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

    Yeah, that was the point of the reductio. One black/white pixel can encode one bit. 800x600 24-bit pixels can encode 11.5 million bits. But that's just a quantitative difference that doesn't bear on the problem with your argument.
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    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

    Not sure what distinction you are drawing here. Are you suggesting that, unlike the presentist, for the eternalist the nature of space and time contains nothing over and above that which follows from the theory of relativity? (And so for the eternalist there is no such thing as the arrow of time.) I am not so sure. At least I don't see why the eternalist has to be so exclusively committed to the relativistic spacetime.

    But yeah, the arrow of time is another can of worms.
  • You can do with numbers everything that you can do with sets, and the other way around
    Oh hey! I didn't realize that you have joined this form. You've been missed :)
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    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

    I agree, and I think that this is an underappreciated point. Note that relativity is compatible with absolute simultaneity as well* - it just doesn't require or entail or suggest one. Just as the arrow of time would be an extra structure not licensed by the theory, so would simultaneity.

    Does the fact that a feature is not required by a theory, even such a universal and well-supported theory as the Theory of Relativity, imply that it is not a real feature of the world? Not necessarily. It depends on whether the theory was constructed and tested in a way that would be sensitive to the existence of this feature. Since Relativity is agnostic about simultaneity, it doesn't give us an unambiguous answer. But this does put the pressure on the A-theorist to supply a justification.

    * Time loops that are possible in GR make global simultaneity problematic. But first, we don't know if they actually exist - all we know is that they are compatible with GR. And more importantly, I don't think that global A-properties should be a requirement for A theories; local properties should be enough, given the phenomenology to which their proponents appeal.
  • Simple proof there is no infinity
    So, taking your "proof" to its logical conclusion, if you could encode all the information in the universe with a digital dataset - that is to say, a sequence of zeros and ones - then all you would end up with would be a bunch of zeros and ones. And since any zero or one is just like any other zero or one, it follows that there are only two distinct things in the universe, which repeat many times over. Brilliant!
  • Plantinga: Is Belief in God Properly Basic?
    When you put a provocative question in the title of the thread, most people are just going to respond to the title without bothering to read further. I learned this the hard way. Well, most people won't bother reading further than the title anyway, but at least if you don't bait them you might get fewer useless replies.
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    As always, it's impossible to tell when someone claims to represent opponents' arguments made elsewhere, whether they are doing it accurately. Anyway, the arguments as presented sound pretty confused, which doesn't inspire one to follow their refutation, especially since the refutation is pretty confused as well.

    For example, after extensive paraphrasing, the blogger ends up with the following thesis:

    (1) Relativity of simultaneity + all observers’ 3D worlds are real at every event = block universe

    I take it from the context that "observers" here are not meant literally, but rather as virtual probes that could potentially be dropped anywhere within the spacetime block. Oh, wait. Well, he does go on to state the obvious: that the second premise already presupposes the conclusion. But then for some reason he backtracks and adds that the first premise is needed as well, although he doesn't explain why.
  • The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
    I love SEP, and I certainly wouldn't mind more of a good thing, but is it really a model for what Internet ought to be? It is a pretty small step from a print academic encyclopedia, basically conforming to the Internet ideal circa early 90s (when SEP was conceived). Plus what said.

    My favorite article? I can't be bothered reviewing and comparing the articles that I have read so far, but here is some random hotness: Chance versus Randomness. Comprehensive, comprehensible, authoritative, authorial, and up-to-date: "First published Wed Aug 18, 2010; substantive revision Thu Feb 8, 2018" (just as the OP article states, revisions are done in four-year cycles).

    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 don't think you understand the concept of a modern encyclopedia. Encyclopedia is not for publishing original research or stating one's own opinions (though opinion cannot - and should not - be completely eschewed even when attempting an objective survey). The objective of an encyclopedia like the SEP is to give you the lay of the land - both in its historical and its contemporary dimensions. Where to go from there is your choice. Drill down the references that seem most promising - or set out on your own if none of them are. With the background knowledge, at least you will not work in ignorance and isolation.
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    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

    This also brings up another relevant question: does the coordinate time of a mathematical model (in this case the theory of relativity), physical time (time that is measured by physical clocks) and metaphysical time always coincide? I am more than a little skeptical of the metaphysical time (as distinct from the other two), although some A-theorists find themselves more-or-less forced to assume it in order to rescue the hypothesis. But as for mathematical vs. physical time, hypothetical time loops in GR spacetime may be one of the instances where they pull apart. And they highlight a problem with relativity as a model of time: relativity does not have a concept of the arrow of time. Sure, the coordinate time has two opposite directions, but there is no fundamental distinction between them; the designations of "future" and "past" are purely conventional in the model. If what you are saying about closed timelike curves is correct, it appears that even as the physical time reverses its flow, the coordinate time does not notice the fact, merrily ticking along. (Another interesting question is what happens after the heat death or, in some models, at the Big Bang, where physical time may effectively disappear, even as coordinate time goes on. But that is a discussion for another time, as it were.)

    Relativity does have the concept of the passage of time, and notably it admits differential rates of time, when the duration of proper time is shorter along some future-directed worldlines than others, as in the twins paradox - in effect giving us future time travel. The way we, as empiricists, can know that this really does capture at least some aspects of the flow of time is that this is something that has observable physical consequences: the differential rates of time's passage can actually be marked and recorded by physical clocks in properly conducted experiments. But the question remains: are there limits to the fidelity of this model when it comes to describing time?

    I am not yet sure what to make of past time travel. Not surprisingly, there is plenty of literature on this issue as well, including discussions of causality paradoxes (see for instance SEP articles on time, or Kutach's article in A Companion to the Philosophy of Time, or Smeenk and Wüthrich's article in The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Time). But I think I'll leave this can of worms for another time...
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    In what sense do virtual or real particles live outside the mathematical equations?MathematicalPhysicist

    We get a sense that some theoretical entity is more than a mathematical contrivance if it does not go away when we change the model, i.e. if we find it indispensable. Our sense of the reality of the thing also strengthens when we find more independent ways of probing it with empirical tests. However, these criteria are not so solid and there is room for much ambiguity in edge cases. Physicists do not usually obsess over questions of whether something is really real or somewhat real or not quite real.
  • Does Rare Earth Hypothesis Violate the Mediocrity Principle Too Much?
    You seem to agree that we must of necessity occupy some very special place in the universe (a habitable place in a universe that is nearly everywhere uninhabitable), but then plow on with your pet theory anyway. But if we were living in a simulation, what would that have changed? In the simulated universe (even if it is only a small, generic chunk of it that is being simulated) we would be just as lonely. And the Rare Earth hypothesis would have the exact same status in a simulated universe as in a real one, because of course what is true of an actual thing must also be true of its simulation.

    The debate around Rare Earth hypothesis has nothing to do with us being "special" (whatever that means) - it is simply about how common inhabitable planets are in the universe, which is an empirical, scientific question (even if we are not in a good position to answer it now or possibly ever).
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    But what's the relationship between the block universe (a physical model) and the metaphysical interpretation of time?Echarmion

    Yes, that is a question that is often glossed over. Scientists in particular often implicitly assume the stance of scientific realism when talking about time, i.e. that all and only those things that are posited by our best scientific theories are real (or something like this) - which is natural, since methodological realism, which we assume when doing science, and metaphysical realism are easily confused. But whatever the merits of this position, it is a philosophical position and must be acknowledged and defended as such.

    It is uncontroversial that physics in general, and relativistic physics in particular does not endorse presentism or the A series. But what conclusions are we warranted to make from that fact?
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    To my limited understanding, Einstein based his theory of Relativity on the idea that we live in a block universe.christian2017

    No, relativity does not assume any of the questions that are at issue, such as whether the present is in some sense more "real" than the past or the future, or whether past, present and future tenses are objective properties and not merely indexical. Some argue that relativity makes anything but the block universe untenable, but not because that is already assumed by the theory.

    To be clear, "block universe" in this context is not merely a visualization of the spacetime continuum (in Newtonian physics you can also visualize the space and time dimensions as a single block). Here it is a synonym for the B-theory of time or for eternalism, which are metaphysical positions.
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    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

    You have to be careful when you say "different times," unless they are all on the same worldline, which is not the case here. From what I gather (and I have to admit, I hadn't encountered this type of objection before; the most common objections from relativistic physics have to do with the relativity of simultaneity in Minkowski spacetime), closed time-like curves and some other other topologies that are theoretically allowed by GR are a prima facie problem for presentism because they cannot be foliated (i.e. you cannot slice spacetime along constant-time hypersurfaces). And even if we stay with one worldline, closed time seems to imply that there can be no objective "pastness" and "futureness," as the traditional A-theory requires. But it is still possible to recover a local surrogate of presentism even in a spacetime with time loops - see for instance Steven Savitt, Time Travel and Becoming (2005) and Phil Dowe, A and B Theories of Closed Time (2017). A more common response for a presentist though is to deny that such non-foliable spacetimes are (meta)physically possible, and that is a defensible position, since we don't know for a fact that they are.

    Outside of closed time-like curves though GR - specifically, the GR of our universe - is said by some to be more hospitable to presentism than generic SR because its symmetries naturally lend themselves to defining special reference frames and privileged observers (e.g. the rest frame of local matter or the CMB), and those are said to be good candidates for defining objective now. (I don't think I buy this argument myself.)

    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

    There is some truth to this, but if you haven't yet surveyed the extensive literature on the subject, then perhaps the review articles that I posted at the top will go some way towards disabusing you of the notion that this is a settled issue in philosophy.

    Dean Zimmerman writes: "The A‐theory is almost certainly a minority view among contemporary philosophers with an opinion about the metaphysics of time." (He frames presentism as a variety of the A theory.) "Nevertheless, it has many defenders—Ian Hinckfuss, J. R. Lucas, E. J. Lowe, John Bigelow, Trenton Merricks, Ned Markosian, Thomas Crisp, Quentin Smith, Craig Bourne, Bradley Monton, Ross Cameron, William Lane Craig, Storrs McGall, Peter Ludlow, George Schlesinger, Robert M. Adams, Peter Forrest, and Nicholas Maxwell, to name a few." He notes further:

    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)

    Laying my own cards on the table, I am not a proponent of either A- or B-theory, eternalism, presentism or possibilism; rather, I suspect that there isn't a substantive difference between them. But I've only dipped my toes into this subject on occasion, so I haven't made up my mind.

    As for who is better equipped to address such questions, I don't consider philosophers better equipped than scientists.Douglas Alan

    I do, in general. For one thing, scientists rarely consider the same questions as philosophers. Their approach tends to be instrumentalist; excepting those few who work on foundations (which is widely considered to be a philosophical subject among scientists, and thus widely discouraged), they favor questions that can be resolved empirically, rather than through conceptual analysis or other approaches employed by philosophers. Nearly all the literature on this subject that I have come across was written by philosophers, many of whom understand the relevant science very well (for such general questions the scientific underpinnings aren't that difficult or esoteric). And scientists who do opine on philosophical questions are subject to the same competence limitations as other laymen.
  • Does Relativity imply block universe?
    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
  • Does Rare Earth Hypothesis Violate the Mediocrity Principle Too Much?
    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

    Our habitable conditions may be "average" in some sense, but certainly not with respect to their habitability! Your framing of the problem is absurd: we are not dropped into a random spot in the universe, or else we would have found ourselves floating in empty space.
  • Chinese Muslims: Why are they persecuted?
    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's the official line. Was that a Chinese documentary that you watched?
  • Moral Debt
    In order to talk about "balancing" moral actions, you need to somehow quantify the moral weight, or worth of actions, to be able to compare, add and subtract these quantities and to evaluate their cumulative magnitude. This basically describes a metric over the set of moral actions. I am not sure why you object to this characterization.

    Anyway, my objection is not that your proposal has the structure of a metric - after all, any theory has a structure of one sort or another, and there is nothing inherently wrong with a metric structure. My objection, or rather my query is very simple: Why this theory? It has some intuitive appeal, but it also has objectionable implications. Is there something about this theory that makes the price worth paying? I suspect that you may be led by implicit assumptions (namely, that there must be something like a metric of moral worth) or seduced by the elegance and simplicity of this theory. I may be wrong, but so far you have shed little light on your motivations.
  • Something out of nothing.
    That is exactly right.CommonSense

    You have a tendency of taking words out of context and using them inappropriately. Stop that. Your comment, while expressing an agreement, has nothing to do with what I actually wrote.
  • Moral Debt
    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 may not have been your intention, but that is what it amounts to. Even if you say that this moral arithmetic is loose, it still has the approximate structure of an arithmetic. And my question still stands: why? You admit that this model has unpalatable consequences, such as paying forward for bad deeds*, as @BitconnectCarlos pointed out - that certainly doesn't seem right. So what's the attraction of the model? Does mathematical neatness overcome moral reservations?

    * Actually, "paying forward" is a known psychological phenomenon: we tend to give ourselves more license after we do good deeds, especially those that are costly and demanding. But while this may be an unconscious tendency, when we become conscious of it, we usually recognize its moral faultiness.
  • Something out of nothing.
    That's not traveling; that's waiting.Douglas Alan

    Time travel is nothing more nor less than waiting. You are perhaps led astray by conventional word associations: waiting feels passive, while traveling feels active. But once you build or find your time machine/closed time-like curve, all you need and can do in order to complete your journey through time is what all of us do all of the time: wait, let the time pass. And if the spacetime topology happens to have a certain exotic configuration, then your waiting may take you to places unexpected.

    But all this is an unnecessary complication, because, whatever the topology of your worldline, you still exist/existed/will exist on the points of that worldline. And the question remains: do all of those points exist? Or does only one moving point exist? Or a growing segment? Is there a fact of the matter about which of these points are in the past and which are in the future? These are metaphysical questions (or perhaps, as some argue, language questions), which physics is not equipped to address.
  • Is intellectual validation a necessary motivator to you?
    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

    That's a problematic reasoning. You can by the same token reduce everything to "animalistic features" - we are animals, after all; we are also physical bodies, so you could reduce everything to "physical features" - and so on. I am not denying the validity of such reductions, but the conclusion that you draw from this move is what is problematic.

    PS This is actually a variation on Stove's Worst Argument in the World:

    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)

    Here you could restate your argument thus:

    Our motivations are, in the final analysis, produced by our evolved biological faculties; therefore our motivations are irrational.

    The first part is not terribly problematic; it is therefore that does not follow.
  • Moral Debt
    This assumes a scalar metric of moral action that accumulates and follows the usual arithmetic rules. Why assume that?
  • Something out of nothing.
    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

    Well, your point, as in the point of this thread, is rather elusive. But as to a more specific point that I was addressing, it is simply wrong. It is wrong to say of someone who has died that she has no past, for example - in the same way that it is wrong to say "The present king of France is bald." If you say "Albertine has no past," this can be interpreted as a conjunction:

    1. There is one and only one x such as x is Albertine.
    2. For every x that is Albertine, x has no past.

    But if Albertine is dead, then (1) is false, which makes "Albertine has no past" false (as well as "Albertine has a past," of course).
  • Something out of nothing.
    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

    I think I am getting a handle on this confusing bit that recurs in your posts. The problem here is even more basic than tensed predicates. You cannot predicate anything in the absence of an entity to which the predicate would attach. You cannot describe someone who does not exist as having no past, because you cannot describe someone who does not exist at all.

    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 bookCommonSense

    When even after two pages of discussion you have failed to so much as hint at such an argument (beyond the tired old Pascal's Wager), I don't think I want to invest my time into reading your book.