You say there is nothing you can say about things as they are. — hypericin
...is an expression of the view with which I am disagreeing. I do think we can make true statements.Since we cannot discern the goings on in this world as it is in itself, we cannot make statements about it, let alone true statements. On this view, there is precious little that we can say that is true. — Banno
Read the description of the block universe you provided. That's what it implies happens. — Banno
Fuck. The only difference is that I object to the word "illusion" - it's not an illusion. — Banno
End of posts on this topic. — Banno
That's not right. For someone inside the block universe, time does flow. — Banno
It appears to flow, but it does not actually flow. This is not because of the physics of the block universe, since time does not flow. Rather, it's illusion created by our nervous system. — Marchesk
The fact that we cannot arrange the universe like a single orderly sequence of times does not mean that nothing changes. It means that changes are not arranged in a single orderly succession: the temporal structure of the world is more complex than a simple single linear succession of instants. This does not mean that it is non-existent or illusory.
The distinction between past, present and future is not an illusion. It is the temporal structure of the world. But the temporal structure of the world is not that of presentism. The temporal relations between events are more complex than we previously thought, but they do not cease to exist on account of this. The relations of filiation do not establish a global order, but this does not make them illusory. If we are not all in single file, it does not follow that there are no relations between us. Change, what happens - this is not an illusion. What we have discovered is that it does not follow a global order...
What confuses us when we seek to make sense of the discovery that no objective universal present exists is only the fact that our grammar is organised around an absolute distinction - ‘past/present/future’ - that is only partially apt, here in our immediate vicinity. The structure of reality is not the one that this grammar presupposes. We say that an event ‘is, or ‘has been’, or ‘will be’. We do not have a grammar adapted to say that an event ‘has been’ in relation to me but ‘is’ in relation to you...
In the world, there is change, there is a temporal structure of relations between events that is anything but illusory. It is not a global happening. It is a local and complex one which is not amenable to being described in terms of a single global order. — Carlo Rovelli, ‘The Order of Time’
or forget this world-as-it-is talk and just get on with stuff. — Banno
Because they are part of the flow, or one of the things that flows (changes), relative to the flow of the other things inside the block. It's not time that flows, rather it is the objects inside the block that flows. Time flowing isn't the illusion. Time itself is the illusion.That's not right. For someone inside the block universe, time does flow. — Banno
the block-verse model doesn't specify the indexical here-now, you have to plug it in. Call it a feature or incomplete if you like; the model has use. — jorndoe
Without the A series then, there would be no change, and consequently the B series by itself is not sufficient for time, since time involves change.
The B series, however, cannot exist except as temporal, since earlier and later, which are the distinctions of which it consists, are clearly time-determinations. So it follows that there can be no B series where there is no A series, since where there is no A series there is no time. — J. M. E. McTaggart
Sometimes there’s a (possibly subtle) misunderstanding of eternalism, or a block universe, in that the universe is said to be frozen, static, something like that. This is inaccurate, however, since change already is modeled along the temporal axis. On eternalism, or the block universe, there “is” still time (— by the way, notice the present tense “is” here — it’s misleading due to our language). Claiming that the past exists now is incoherent. Should a future come to pass, then that’s what the block model is supposed to have (thereby also separating ontology and epistemology). — jorndoe
Does it even make sense to ponder the existence of an observer outside the "flow of time"? Observing itself is a "flow" (change). It's "flow" all the way down. — Harry Hindu
"see the world as it is" is inherently contradictory. "See" is a stand in for perceive. "Perceive" as we know it means to transform signals into a symbolic domain — hypericin
I don't understand what this means. It takes time to make predictions and they are all happening in your brain, not "outside" the flow of time. At best, you are talking about imagining that you are outside the flow of time, not some ontologically real view somewhere outside of your own head, and "outside of time".Every time we predict or anticipate events, we posit a perspective outside the ‘flow of time’. And every time we test those predictions, we edit and refine a relational structure that perceives the block universe in potentiality. Time isn’t an illusion - it’s just structured differently in the block universe. — Possibility
I don't understand what this means. It takes time to make predictions and they are all happening in your brain, not "outside" the flow of time. At best, you are talking about imagining that you are outside the flow of time, not some ontologically real view somewhere outside of your own head, and "outside of time".
Potential is just another type of imagining, akin to predictions (they may just be the same thing). To say that something that hasn't happened has the potential to happen just means that you predict it could happen, but there would have to be some other pre-existing conditions. A ball on the table has the potential to fall off of it, but only if it's pushed, pulled, or acted on in some way, and until it is acted on in some way, it will stay on the table and the potential remains an imaginary construct. — Harry Hindu
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