Does this mean that from your perspective, movement is not real either? Is movement simply an abstraction as well? — Metaphysician Undercover
Isn't the boundary between one infinitesimal point instant and another simply artificial, completely conceptual? Otherwise, how could you say that the instant is an abstraction? Wouldn't it be more accurate to say that there is simply duration, and the point-instants are just conceptual? If not, what evidence do you have, that such point-instants are real? — Metaphysician Undercover
Could you explain what you mean when you say that all time, space, and being, are present in one point? is this an extremely large point, or what type of "point" are you talking about here, some type of black hole
Your last paragraph makes no sense in light of your first two paragraphs.I do buy "Justified true belief", but I think the use of the word "belief" is technical and precisely defined. In reality the belief in this use is equivalent to what is understood in the word "acceptance", acceptance of a view, perspective or condition.
So it isn't really a belief in the way belief is used in reference to things which can't be tested, or determined,like God. A use much closer to the spirit of the word.
The other common use of belief, is I think entirely unnecessary and sloppy language. Namely I believe the sun will rise tomorrow. Belief is not required here, rather I know the sun will rise tomorrow. I don't require belief in this to accept that the sun will rise tomorrow and hence to know that it will rise tomorrow, while I do not believe it will rise tomorrow. — Punshhh
Try telling someone who believes in God that it's a sophomoric misunderstanding. — Punshhh
Yes exactly, the boundaries are "completely artificial", that is why I say they are "abstractly conceived". I think it is more accurate (to experience at least, if not to abstract thought) to say that "there is simply duration and the point instants are just conceptual"; in fact that is just what I have been saying. The point instants are real, abstractly speaking, however, insofar as they are really thought; but they are not phemonemologically real, insofar as they are not really experienced as such. — John
Considered abstractly the moment is an infinitesimal point-instant, and just as a series of infinitesimal points constitute a line, so a series of infinitesimal point-instants constitute a duration. Abstractly considered passing from one moment to another can only consist in a traversal across further infinitesimal point-instants. So the moment-as-point-instant is not anything we could be in. — John
So I take it that instants are irrelevant to the passing of time then, time passes regardless of whether human beings mark off instants. Then the following paragraph should be perhaps considered, as wrongly stated: — Metaphysician Undercover
Duration is something other than a series of point-instants. A series of point-instants is a measured time, abstracted, or conceptual, but unmeasured, there is just duration without instants. A series of point instants might be how one represents a duration, but it is not duration itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
Not exactly how I would frame it. Time passes only by virtue of its being marked off; and this would seem to involve the idea of instants or points of reference. Otherwise the marking off is in terms of events; but where there is merely a succession of events that can never be truly discrete, there would seem to be no passing of time, but rather a seamless movement or transition within time. — John
The passing of time is an abstract conception, like the marking of instants. There is no marking of instants or passing of time independently of us; I would say. — John
But, yeah, as I said before of course you may be able to find grounds to disagree with this; just as you may be able to find grounds to disagree with anything that could be said on the subject. — John
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