I would say it is logically impossible for something to have no speed, and yet be dynamic. — hypericin
Any dynamic process, a chemical reaction for example, has a speed. "Rate", if you prefer.
Time, as you point out, cannot have a speed/rate.
Therefore, time cannot be a dynamic process. — hypericin
You can measure it's average position, the rate of jumping, it's average instantaneous speed between jumps... I'm talking about speed in the sense of rate of change.
Another reason time can have no speed: change in time over time makes no sense. — hypericin
But I am arguing that time has no absolute speed. We can easily accept that motion can have only a relative speed, this accords more or less well with our intuitive understanding of motion. But with time, it is much more difficult. It clashes with the intuitive notion that time is plodding forward at a constant rate.
So the problem remains: there are at most minute measurable differences, in most cases, in the relative speeds of time. But there is no such thing as an absolute speed of time. And without a speed, how can time, as we understand it, operate at all? — hypericin
How can Process Itself have a speed relative to actual processes? — hypericin
A realm of objects in eternal inertial motion is already as rock-bottom unchanging as you are going to get.
Yeah, in a way, but that doesn't mean that it's not actual. It's process in general, not any specific process (like say just a clock ticking). Or in other words, it ranges over all actual processes.I took that to mean that you regard time as somehow the abstract essence of processes. — hypericin
We can imagine space as a 3D euclidean space, divided into a mesh of invisible little points or cubes. Motion then has an absolute meaning, as moving with respect to this mesh. — hypericin
But what if we treat time as a 1D line, analogous with space? Then, unlike with space, every object is at the same point, and moving through time at the same rate. Which, unless you imagine absolute points along this 1D line, analogous to the lattice of cubes in space, is also like saying that every object is motionless in time. Or, if you invoke relativity, then objects are only moving in time to the degree that relativistic effects are observed. — hypericin
Or can we dispense with time altogether? Everything is just process, at rates relative to each other and nothing else, in an eternal present? I am ignorant as to whether physics actually requires an ontologically existent time, as opposed to a formal notion which makes the equations work. — hypericin
It defines simultaneity in terms of a standard temperature. Right "now" the cosmic time is 2.725 degrees above absolute zero. And there is a thermal arrow that points from when the Universe was hotter to when it will be even cooler still. — apokrisis
Well if you believe a clock can actually measure time, then surely that answers your own question?Whatever a clock is, it represents the way you already conceive of time. — apokrisis
That seems over-broad though, like saying that "Time is the universe." What isn't a process, or a part of one? — hypericin
Even if you pack a huge amount of power into a small thing, then let it go, like a wind up toy, that thing has to accelerate to get up to top speed, before starting to slow down. How is time supposed to get up to top speed, before starting to slow down? — Metaphysician Undercover
then how is a single number sufficient to tell us the current state of time? — hypericin
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