I think that is what Prothero and I are saying, which is time, is merely a conceptual abstract. Time is subordinate to change. Think of it like music. The sounds of music itself came before music theory. — 3017amen
Or if you like, think of it as mathematics. The universe existed before mathematical genius. — 3017amen
If God is eternity (outside of time), and time was created at the big bang, there must have been events/change prior to the creation of time which caused time itself. — 3017amen
I think that is what Prothero and I are saying, which is time, is merely a conceptual abstract. — 3017amen
Where is time in a changless world? — prothero
Where is time in a changless world? — prothero
No, I just think the idea illustrates the fact that the concept of time depends on change, not vice versa. — prothero
So, "time" cannot simply be abstracted away from change and only exist as a concept, just like "green" cannot be abstracted away from green objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
So if you say that time is just a concept, with nothing corresponding to it, you have no possibility of truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
Thanks for your reply. I realize there will be some paradoxical reasoning here, however, I would take exception to the analogy. The aforementioned quote would only be like saying " Time cannot be abstracted away from a clock", which makes it obvious (which is only to say) that Time and the object known as a clock is synonymous with the measurement of time. — 3017amen
However, the subordination v. primacy of time is what is at issue. In other words, much like existence over essence, the existence of change takes primacy over the measurement of it. The measurement known as time. — 3017amen
And so the point is to assign primacy over the phenomenon of time and change. Existentially, one could say then, that the existence of change takes primacy over the essence of time. Essences are metaphysical abstracts. Of course, it doesn't mean essences are not perceived, it's just that we don't know their true objective nature. But we do know and can understand the existence of change through most observation. — 3017amen
I sometimes think of time along with space (extension) present in an ooze, generating its own reality as it extrudes.In mathematics it's easy to find examples of a passage of time with no change, as well as a change at an instant. Is that possible in the physical world? :chin:
Right, the clock measures time, so time cannot be abstracted away from the clock. You do not agree with this? Then what does the clock do? — Metaphysician Undercover
The existence of change takes primacy over the concept of time, which is the measurement of change done by comparison. But the existence of time, as the thing measured, is measured by change (the turning of the earth measures a day) and this takes primacy over change. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, we say that there is heat within the thing itself, so the thing has a temperature regardless of whether it's measured, just like time passes regardless of whether it is measured. — Metaphysician Undercover
Is eternity outside of time? If it is, then when Time/Universe had a beginning, something outside of time caused Time to exist, hence a change of events preceded Time. Time would then be subordinate to a change or change in events/being or becoming, whichever you prefer. (See the 4:40 mark of the video.) — 3017amen
Interesting...sounds like you are referring to Einstein's Block Universe theory, where time is just an illusion...(?). — 3017amen
Time is a geometric shape just like any object. Time, in human experience, depends on information reaching a certain point: where the human being happens to be. Human consciousness (at least physical consciousness) is located at a point in space and time flows as information reaches this point. But what if someone's consciousness could fill the whole solar system or universe. What would time be like then? — EnPassant
And so I come back to my argument that heat and time coexist together, and that one cannot exist without the other. — Justin Peterson
Well let me ask you this, do you deny that time is man made? — Justin Peterson
Also would you agree that time is relative, not even in the same way previously mentioned as being the transfer of information, but instead in the way that ten minutes can seem like an eternity to somebody pulsing with epinephrine, — Justin Peterson
Yes. There is a difference between our subjective experience of time and time as it is objectively. Time is the geometry of events (this is what Relativity describes). — EnPassant
Time as a subjective experience can be relative. Time in the mind is not the same as physical time. Confusing physical time with our experience of time is a recipe for confusion because our consciousness can be 'locked on' to physical time or it can drift away into mental time which is not the same thing. — EnPassant
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.