Presentism seem to preclude such higher dimensions - by saying 'only now exists' - it says to me that all things that exist, exist in the present. — Devans99
↪coolguy8472
Having time start without a cause is a sort of creation ex nihilo but seems worse because time itself is absence too - could time start/be created whilst lacking both time and a cause? — Devans99
What I mean is:
- creation without time and anything else is impossible
- creation without time but with something else is possible — Devans99
I have been trying to find an example of two things that share no properties and have no similarities with each other, and are completely different from each other. Now, I am aware that there are trivial properties that any thing will have (properties such as self-identity, being a thing, etc.), and also, if three or more things exist, which is obviously the case, then any two things, no matter how different, will share the property of both not being some other third thing. (For example, my leg hair and the Andromeda galaxy both share the property of not being Abraham Lincoln). I don’t count those kinds of properties, as they are inevitably there, and they are so trivial thay many may not even consider them to be properties. I mean significant, noteworthy, non-trivial properties (for example: being blue, being a living organism, being large or small, being square-shaped, etc., etc.). — Troodon Roar
↪coolguy8472
Space is the only other dimension so drawing analogies to time is tempting. So I'm thinking from the spacetime viewpoint. So thinking of an object as a solid brick in 4D space time, if there is no temporal start, it implies one side of the brick is missing. That's not a valid object IMO.
I'm trying to formulate an argument from a different angle:
1. Can’t get something from nothing
2. So something must have permanent existence (else there would be nothing)
3. That something in itself has no cause
4. To have no cause; something must be beyond cause and effect; IE beyond time.
5. So time must have a start and eternalism holds — Devans99
↪coolguy8472 What is the trivial property you have in mind, simply the word 'thing'?
My argument is that any concept that we think is also a contrast, an edge. A line implies that which it emerges out of, the background. Something is only something because it has an edge, a contrast, a boundary. It also emerges out of something else. The word 'nothing' would be incoherent if it didn't also imply a contrast, edge, boundary. Nothing can only be nothing because it emerges from something prior to it. It is a negation of a prior something. 'Nothing' intrinsically depends for its very meaning on 'something'. Its like darkness and light. Each means what it does only by comparison to its other. — Joshs
↪coolguy8472 But for it to be one object, the temporal start must be connected to the temporal end (else it is two separate objects).
I think you have to think about the topology of objects in space and then transfer that thinking to time. In space, saying something has no identifiable start point is equivalent to saying it does not exist - if it has no start point, it has no length (end-start) or breadth so it can't exist. It is exactly the same thing when you come to consider time.
For me, things without starts are in an infinite regress and thus are impossible. If you think about a moment, it defines the following moment. So infinite time forms an infinite regress. But there is no overall starting moment, so none of the moments in the infinite regress can ultimately be fully defined. Each moment makes sense by its own, but overall infinite time cannot be because the whole think is undefined.
If you think about the set of negative integers:
{ ..., -4, -3, -2, -1 }
The ... means the set is partially defined. Strictly speaking that means undefined. Anything without a start is undefined. — Devans99
You cannot use Santa's non existence to prove you don't exist. — Devans99
It is a fact that the start is always connected to the end so it is always valid to traverse from start to end proving non-existence. — Devans99
Your argument shows that Santa does not exist. That does not show my argument is invalid. — Devans99
Just because time still exists, does not mean that the object existed at that time. We know the object has no temporal start point so the object will not exist at the next point in time (even though that point of time exists). — Devans99
I am not; it is a fact that the start is connected to the end. So if the start does not exist, the end does not exist. All that is required is to know that the start is missing. — Devans99
1. Assume a particle does not have a (temporal) start point
2. If the particle does not have a start, then it cannot have a ‘next to start’ (because that would qualify as a start)
3. So particle does not have a next to start (by Modus Ponens on [1] and [2]).
4. And so on for next to, next to start, all the way to time start+∞ (IE now)
5. Implies particle does not have a (temporal) end
6. Implies particle never existed
2. If the particle does not have a start, then it cannot have a ‘next to start’ (because that would qualify as a start)
4. And so on for next to, next to start, all the way to time start+∞ (IE now)
5. The being has always experienced events. No matter how far we go back in time, the being experienced events. So it must have experienced some events greater than any number of years ago. Which is a contradiction (can’t be a number and greater than any number at the same time). — Devans99
I could say if the universe does not have an age; it is not a universe. Having no age implies the universe has no temporal start implies none of it exists. — Devans99
You have lost me. An eternal universe would not have a cause makes sense.But apart from that I not sure what you mean? — Devans99
The age of the universe is a numeric property; it takes a single numeric value. Actual infinity has no fixed value. Having a fixed value is the defining characteristic of a number. So Actual infinity is not a number. So it cannot be used for the age of the universe, size of the universe or any other real life numeric property. — Devans99
Actual infinity has its own mathematical rules like:
∞+1=∞
Which make no logical sense. An object that when you change it, it does not change? There is no such object so the actual infinity concept flies in the face of our everyday experience and logic. — Devans99
It does not matter if it's called 'start' or 'beginning', objects must have one in order to exist. — Devans99
be solved?
As of now an outside observer using fMRI can only see that certain areas of the brain light up, but it is impossible to tell what is going on at the cellular level. Let's suppose that you had access to all this data, could you then predict exactly what they are thinking?
My guess is that the answer is no, and that having this information is not sufficient to solve the mind-body problem. After all, you would still never be able to know the exact moment when an electrical signal turned into a thought, or how that happened. What implications does this then have, does it mean the mind-body problem can never be solved? — curiousnewbie
Look at it this way, say our eternal universe has a clock (its just a thought experiment). What time would it read? — Devans99
↪coolguy8472
In your version:
1. Says that the number of events (in an infinite regress) is a number
2a. Says that infinity is not a number
So that means that the number of events must be a finite number... which means an infinite regress is not infinite.
Another way to look at it is that an infinite regress has no start. So therefore it has no 'next to' start element and so on until the end of the series... its all nothing. — Devans99
Hearsay evidence can increase the reliability of the witness, and thereby increase the likelihood of the claim being true. But it's not about the substance of the claim, that's what "hearsay" means. — Echarmion
You still haven't explained how this is supposed to work. Just claiming to have witnesses is just another claim. — Echarmion
But there is an actual physical property of the system, the age of the universe, which takes a numeric value. It must have some value. That value has to be greater than any number. Contradiction.
I think that reality is logical so it would not include illogical concepts like infinity. — Devans99
I think that numbers matter here. 10 witnesses make for a stronger case than just 1 or no witness at all. Multiple accounts that agree in content make it objective because it is unlikely that so many people are wrong about something. One person alone could be mistaken, hallucinating, deluded, etc.
However it seems that the value of witnesses is relative. 10 witnesses may be better than one/no witness but a 100 witnesses is better than just 10 witnesses. I think the number of witnesses should fit the nature of the claim. More out-of-the-ordinary the claim the more witnesses required. — TheMadFool
↪coolguy8472
I think actually I have made an error with my proof that an infinite regress is impossible - sorry. Amended version below:
1. The number of events in an infinite regress is greater than any number.
2. Which is a contradiction; can’t be a number and greater than any number.
3. But can be a number greater than every other number
4. But there is no greatest number (If X is greatest, what about X+1)
5. So is not a number (from 3 and 4)
6. Contradicts [1] which says it is a number — Devans99
By definition, a hearsay witness has no information on the actual event in question. Hearing a claim does not make that claim more or less likely (unless the claim is about being overheard). — Echarmion
Mathematically speaking they call such things “impossible” not “improbable” - like jumping to the moon. It is also impossible for sand to be randomly blown around and construct a sculpture of my face. Entropy doesn’t allow this. — I like sushi
Hearsay only provides evidence of the overheard (or otherwise recorded) statement being made. It's not evidence for the content of the claim. — Echarmion
Some people? What do you think? What are your reasons? Isn't this why you opened a discussion on a philosophy forum? — SophistiCat
Look up what "hearsay" means. "Double hearsay" would be something like "My cousin heard from her hairdresser that X won the lottery." Your case is completely different. — SophistiCat