I was rejecting the idea that the 4D object moves wrt the 4D universe, an idea that would require some other dimension of time to make sense of. — Kenosha Kid
I frequently said that if the 4D object has slopes or wiggles, "it is moving", i.e. has motion, i.e. is sometimes moving. — Kenosha Kid
Refer to my previous explanation of how motion is recovered without assuming the 3D object at t' is the same as that at t, if you're interested — Kenosha Kid
motion may still be recovered in this eternalism, even if we assume the object at t' to be different to the object at t, so long as there exists another continuity connecting the objects at t and t'. This is at least sensible: we do not see an object disappear then be replaced by a different but indistingushable object.
Then we can define a new kinematics over that continuity, identical in mathematical form to the previous kinematics except maybe from some replacement of dummy variables (e.g. t -> i), and giving exactly the same net result. This thing would look identical to what motion looks like in normal eternalism, where the object at t' is just another part of the same object at t. — Kenosha Kid
It is exactly in concord. "has motion", "is sometimes moving" appear to be equivalent expressions. — Kenosha Kid
The 4D shape is not moving. In what sense are the different 3D slices moving?
— Luke
It is, as in "it is sometimes moving". — Kenosha Kid
It is not a condition in eternalism that a 4D object need move within a 4D space to have motion, since that would be a new kind of motion (hypermotion, I guess) in an even higher-dimensional space that would be hard to conceive of. — Kenosha Kid
TL;DR version: the concept of motion is recoverable even without continuity of identity — Kenosha Kid
If that shape is not just comprised of the same 3D slice for all times, it is moving. — Kenosha Kid
In the same way, a mountain is not comprised of the same 2D slice at all altitudes and thus has a spatial gradient. — Kenosha Kid
I think you are a presentist in denial. You insist on presentist notions being true in 4D for motion to occur. — Kenosha Kid
The other thing I think you are both illicitly assuming is that it is the same 3D object/part over time.
— Luke
Yes, but that is true of any kinematics. — Kenosha Kid
It moves relative to time, which you would be perceiving as another spatial dimension. — Pfhorrest
Pick a particle. Step outside of time and look down at a 4D model of the universe. That particle will look like some crazy string zig-zagging its wave through the universe. — Pfhorrest
At some point in time, that string is at one point in space. At other points in time, it is at other points in space. But there is no meta-time across which they can "previously" have been at one place at time t, but "now" they're in a different place at the same time t. — Pfhorrest
Given that motion is by definition with respect to time, just as spatial gradients are by definition with respect to space, you can't use them interchangeably any more than you can measure the radius of a mountain and say that's how tall it is. — Kenosha Kid
So what you're suggesting is about generalising the concepts of 3D shape and motion to a higher-order concept that encompasses both. — Kenosha Kid
So you have a change in position over time. That’s exactly what motion is. — Pfhorrest
Do the 2D cross-sections of a 3D mountain move? Is there motion in the 3D mountain?
— Luke
On geological timescales, sure. On hiker timescales, not so much. — Kenosha Kid
It is merely x that need differ. The value at one time being different to that at another. This does not depend on something moving wrt something else along either x or t. — Kenosha Kid
This is worth clarifying: it is not an analogy. Everything that is true about mountains in 3D is true about mountains in 4D.
4D is a generalisation of 3D that implements time as a dimension like space. That which is true of space in 3D remains true of spacetime in 4D. Just as a mountain has a slope in altitude wrt radius in 3D, it does so in 4D. It may also have a slope in altitude wrt time (erosion or formation). — Kenosha Kid
Change which temporal position you're asking about, and the corresponding spatial position will be different. — Pfhorrest
the main road has a higher elevation in the north than it does in the south...So its elevation changes with latitude — Pfhorrest
But the road isn't moving north over time, and the 4D object isn't moving later through... something. — Pfhorrest
But nothing's moving along the time axis; it's all just laid out. — Kenosha Kid
Have I understood that correctly?
— Luke
Not completely. The gradient in 4D may be with respect to other spatial dimensions just as it can in 3D. — Kenosha Kid
A moving body's position changes with respect to time: that is the very gradient that tells us it is moving. — Kenosha Kid
No. It moves from position to position. In classical kinematics, a body at rest is not said to move from t to t'. — Kenosha Kid
No, I attest that it does, i.e. its position is time-dependent. I deny that this necessitates something moving from t to t' in order to do so. — Kenosha Kid
Because motion in 4D is not given by a time duration, it is given by the geometry of the 4D object over that time duration. If the 3D position of the object varies, it is moving. If it does not, it is not. — Kenosha Kid
In translating phenomena from an eternalist viewpoint to that of subjective experience — Kenosha Kid
Namely, how does {change in temporal position from t to t'} not mean exactly the same thing as {the object has moved from t to t'}? — Luke
Actually motion we get fir free. — Kenosha Kid
It's a direct consequence of its kinematic definition: dx/dt. — Kenosha Kid
Take any of my former uses of these words to mean the same thing.
— Luke
Which thing? — Pfhorrest
Every kind of motion is through one dimension over another dimension. — Pfhorrest
A real car moves from spatial point A to spatial point B over time. It's not at both points at the same time: — Pfhorrest
In order for something to move through time, there must be some hyper-time for that motion to occur over. — Pfhorrest
but you and I agree that the object is not changing its location in time, which is what Luke means by a change in temporal position. — Pfhorrest
our attention is the only thing changing spatial position there — Pfhorrest
3D object move in three dimensions OVER a fourth (time). They’re not moving THROUGH a fourth — Pfhorrest
Things change in space with respect to time. — Pfhorrest
Motion is an inevitable consequence of the geometry of 4D objects. — Kenosha Kid
Then your definition of motion depends on temporal passage, which kinematics does not. — Kenosha Kid
If you are happy with a ruler having length without changing position, you have no reasonable objection to a 4D object having duration without changing temporal position. — Kenosha Kid
If so, are you satisfied that a 3D part at time t' may differ from the 3D part a time t? — Kenosha Kid
It is not a condition in eternalism that a 4D object need move within a 4D space to have motion, since that would be a new kind of motion (hypermotion, I guess) in an even higher-dimensional space that would be hard to conceive of. — Kenosha Kid
