Just because it's distasteful doesn't mean it's wrong. But I think there are serious logical problems with the solipsistic view, coupled with a personal bias against any sort of geocentrism, anthropocentrism, or any other view asserting us having a privileged status.Yeah, solipsism really makes a philosopher run for the hills doesn't it. — substantivalism
If I want to be formal, I had to find a definition of 'me' that didn't violate the law of identity, and it pretty much makes a hash of the way 'me' is used in everyday language. Language is littered with unstated premises, all of which I question (hence my user name), and most of which I cannot justify.It was just the words being used by you such as 'me' that made me think you were taking a sort of idealist direction for you metaphysics but I was wrong there.
Just because it's distasteful doesn't mean it's wrong. But I think there are serious logical problems with the solopsistic view, coupled with a personal bias against any sort of geocentrism, anthropocentrism, or any other view asserting us having a privileged status. — noAxioms
If I want to be formal, I had to find a definition of 'me' that didn't violate the law of identity, and it pretty much makes a hash of the way 'me' is used in everyday language. Language is littered with unstated premises, all of which I question (hence my user name), and most of which I cannot justify. — noAxioms
Here's a blog post on Smolin's relationism that looks pretty reasonable/serious at first blush (haven't read it yet myself, am in the process now but figured I'd post it)-
Lee Smolin's Relationist (Meta)Physics — Enai De A Lukal
None perceived. I agree with your comment that there is a general aversion to solipsism among philosophers, and I was just pointing out that the aversion itself is a poor reason to reject any view. I personally find the view self contradictory, and reject it for that reason.I mean no disrespect — substantivalism
Yes, but again, I identify that as a personal bias, and therefore not good grounds for rejection. Who knows, maybe the universe is made for us. That possibility must be considered, but positing such doesn't seem to explain anything better than more plausible views.We see eye to eye on the geocentrism and anthropocentrism of view points as I also find metaphysics which make us highly centered in the grander scheme of things likewise also highly suspect.
Where I end (spatially, not temporally) is an interesting problem. It seems to be a purely abstract thing. The guy in the sci-fi show straps a time travel device to his wrist and it takes him and his clothes and briefcase to some other time, but doesn't take the nearby shrubbery. How does the device know what's you and what's not? It's intuitive to us, but in trying to tell a device how to do it, it turns out it isn't obvious at all.It's like a sorites problem of sorts to attempt to specify where you end and the greater worldly environment begins.
Space and time, as well as space-time are the concepts human beings have developed to understand their surroundings. We understand our environment as things which are changing relations to each other, and are also changing in themselves. Since these concepts are derived from the fundamental principles which describe our surroundings as things, it doesn't make any sense to talk about space and time as being independent from things.
There was a time when things were thought to move in space. Empty space was required in order that a thing could move, otherwise it would have to push on another thing which would push another an another, and nothing could move. But Einsteinian relativity conceives of things as moving relative to light. This allows that things might move through light without necessarily moving through space, and space and time as concepts, refer to the relations between things and light.. — Metaphysician Undercover
None perceived. I agree with your comment that there is a general aversion to solipsism among philosophers, and I was just pointing out that the aversion itself is a poor reason to reject any view. I personally find the view self contradictory, and reject it for that reason. — noAxioms
Yes, but again, I identify that as a personal bias, and therefore not good grounds for rejection. Who knows, maybe the universe is made for us. That possibility must be considered, but positing such doesn't seem to explain anything better than more plausible views. — noAxioms
I said it is a psychological choice when I decide what components comprise a system or not. The physics of the relationalism has zero to do with this choice.So your perspective is more psychological and related to our conscious experiences. Is this a Berkeley or Kantian strategy you are gleaning from in treating spacetime as a fundamental psychological process but nothing more? — substantivalism
I find the acquisition of new information to be a contradiction in the solipsistic idealist view. Say you find a tomb full of Egyptian writing and spend years trying to decipher it. You've memorized every character and could reproduce it at will from memory, yet you cannot read it. After years of study, you finally break the code and learn the language, and suddenly there is information that was always there, but suddenly is meaningful to you. That implies there is something out there that didn't come from you. I cannot dream of a coherent language that I don't yet understand. Something else has to have produced that tomb, which contradicts your experience being more fundamental than the noumena. That contradiction sinks the view in my opinion.I get that this philosophical viewpoint is not emprically well-founded and never could be (it would be consistent with any personal experience) but it always felt relatively possible. — substantivalism
So your perspective is more psychological and related to our conscious experiences. Is this a Berkeley or Kantian strategy you are gleaning from in treating spacetime as a fundamental psychological process but nothing more? — substantivalism
Technically physical objects in special relativity move relative to other frames of reference and are always going to happen to observe that the top casual speed is c. — substantivalism
It's weird that I voted relationism pretty much on instinct. GR is obviously a theory that compels a substantive picture of spacetime... the stuff bends, for goodness' sake! And yet, deep down, I've often wondered if the wavefunction of the entire universe gives a crap that we have a positional basis set to describe it with. — Kenosha Kid
Sorry, I don't think I can answer this question. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you apprehend, as I do, that making the "top casual speed" (whatever you mean by "casual") as c, is to posit an absolute? — Metaphysician Undercover
When you bring in quantum mechanics perhaps such a situation is much more amenable to the relationist position. . . depending on whether you adopt a background dependent or independent theory and the interpretation that follows from both camps. — substantivalism
When one opens the door to the idea that spatial dimensions can arise from more fundamental structures...
We find a general definition of a space in mathematics: a space is a set of "points" with some added "structure". The points can be whatever but obviously they are not nothing. The structure (also called topology) is a certain collection of subsets of the underlying set of points, and this collection of subsets must satisfy certain conditions (namely, a union and an intersection of any of the subsets must belong to the collection too).
The particular kind of space in general relativity (or "spacetime", which is a 4-dimensional space with time as a special 4th dimension) is a space with a curved metric topology where the points seem to be objects with quantitative properties we call energy and momentum, and these quantitative properties of every point are related to the quantitative properties of other points via regularities across space that we call laws of physics (in general relativity, Einstein field equations).
If we regard objects possessing the properties of energy and momentum as "material" then the space in general relativity is made up of material objects. But apparently there can also be spaces with the same topology but with non-material objects as their points. — litewave
Indeed, relationism (of state rather than intervals) is gaining traction among quantum theorists following the recent Wigner's friend experiments, yet, even as a quantum theorist myself, I don't have much of an ontological position on it. Relativity is much more compelling in that regard but it isn't really an argument for substantivism, more a framework for working with models of a substantive-seeming spacetime.
Even within that framework, there's no obvious reason why the spacetime picture need be fundamental. This is not a counter-argument in itself, but I'm reminded of the holographic principle in which the informational content of a volume, including the entire universe, can be encoded on its surface. (There are theoretical phenomena for which this cannot be true, and it still relies on the existence of a lower-dimensional spacetime.) When one opens the door to the idea that spatial dimensions can arise from more fundamental structures, one struggles to argue that the apparent spacetime we observe is substantive. — Kenosha Kid
Though, it may be difficult to say in what manner spacetime is not substantive because if spacetime truly is emergent or reductive to other fundamental properties then it's perhaps truly non-existent in an eliminativist sense. — substantivalism
In relativity, space and time are on equal footing, so in relativistic QM, position is demoted from an operator to a parameter. One could read that as meaning that spacetime is less physical in relativity than Newtonian mechanics perhaps. — Kenosha Kid
In your interpretation the spacetime points are coexistent, co-present, and coincide ontologically with the objects in question. I would preface that this is an intriguing interpretation as it seems to basically be a form of super-substantivalism in which an entity is exactly identical to that in which it's located at, if i'm getting at your interpretation correctly. — substantivalism
Yes, super-substantivalism seems to be a correct label for my interpretation. I just noted that in the general definition of a space in mathematics/set theory, the points of space can be any objects, so the simplest way of connecting the geometric properties of a space and the properties of matter (energy and momentum) seems to be to encode the properties of matter in the points of the space. Treating matter as a different substance than space would require introduction of a new relation of "occupation" between matter and space, the meaning of which is not clear to me but I guess we can't rule out such an additional relation and its physical distinguishability since general relativity is an incomplete theory.
If matter is a different substance than space, I would say that space is more fundamental than matter in the sense that you can define a space without matter but you can't define matter (energy and momentum) without a space (speed figures in E = mc^2, p = mv). In the paper on super-substantivalism that you linked, in footnote 26 there is a reference to theories of quantum gravity that derive spacetime as a macroscopic emergent entity from an underlying spaceless and timeless "quantum matter", but does this "quantum matter" have the properties of energy and momentum or does it acquire these properties only on the macro scale with reference to spacetime? If it doesn't have energy and momentum below the scale of spacetime maybe we should call it something else than matter. Or maybe we could regard it as an internal structure of spacetime points that encodes properties like energy and momentum which however have no meaning without reference to distances between spacetime points; this leads us back to super-substantivalism. — litewave
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