TMF!
Simple question (well maybe not so simple), could an interminable amount of regressive turtle power suggest infinity and/or eternity of time exists? — 3017amen
I don't think time is real in the sense it exists outside of our minds. Assume time has a beginning, call it point X. We can always ask for any point like X the question, "what time was it before X?", implying time extends to infinity in the past. Yet, if the past is infinite, how on earth did we reach this point in time? Since the paradox arises because we assume time to be something as real as space, we must discard the idea of time being real. :confused: — TheMadFool
Ah, good point: there is a mathematical limit in terms of mass to infinite spliting, a limit that is equal to 0 mass, just as there is a solution in the form if a mathematical limit in Zeno's paradox.Of course you could go Zeno on me — TheMadFool
though i'm unclear about the U1 part. — Olivier5
Ah, good point: there is a mathematical limit in terms of mass to infinite spliting, a limit that is equal to 0 mass, just as there is a solution in the form if a mathematical limit in Zeno's paradox. — Olivier5
I don't think time is real in the sense it exists outside of our minds. Assume time has a beginning, call it point X. We can always ask for any point like X the question, "what time was it before X?", implying time extends to infinity in the past. Yet, if the past is infinite, how on earth did we reach this point in time? Since the paradox arises because we assume time to be something as real as space, we must discard the idea of time being real. :confused: — TheMadFool
The begining of time (your X, or t=0) could be another mathematical limit, like what happens when the function 1/x gets close to zero. In this idea, there's no time before X because the universe never actually was at time X. And the reason the universe managed to reach this point in time is because at (almost) "start" everything happened (almost) infinitily fast. — Olivier5
my vision may improve in my search for distant turtles. — Scemo Villaggio
if time always existed in some way, shape or form sort-a-speak, then [...] — 3017amen
Isn't that already presupposed in your sentence (regardless of whatever span of time)?
Also, there couldn't have been a time when there wasn't anything, since there would at least have been time (check B Rundle). — jorndoe
It's really important for you that god shows up somewhere in creation, — Banno
So even Anselm is to be rehabilitated... — Banno
The way I understand your take, this perfect simplicity at at begining and end of time is still an unreachable limit, a state of affairs that never actually happened at any point in time. — Olivier5
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