Change is essential for time. In a world without change time is meaningless. — TheMadFool
You can't because, to get to the crux of the matter, you can't measure time at all. — TheMadFool
I ask you to consider a world with absolutely no change - no physics, no chemistry, nothing - and then try to insert the concept of time into it. — TheMadFool
3. The value of time lies in measuring rate of change e.g. miles per hour or moles per second etc. However, the second is defined as the time taken for x cycles of a cesium atom. In essence what we're doing is comparing a given change to changes of some order of the repetitive change of a cesium atom. In other words we're actually comparing one change to another, our defined standard (the cesium atom).
So, time is nothing more than a short-hand for repetitive change/phenomena - in our world that of the cesium atom. — TheMadFool
Interesting point in the light of physics and math. Imagine a particle that moves according to the rule f(t) = 0. At every instant of time, it's at position 0. It never moves. Yet time exists as the independent variable. — fishfry
What does this mean in real life? You park your car in the evening and note its position. The next morning, unless you are unlucky, your car is in the same position. — fishfry
How do we measure time? Don't we use repetitive/cyclical change like a pendulum or the cycles of an atom? I don't know if such cyclical phenomena are peculiar to this universe but without them time simply can't be measured. The idea of a space-time frame of reference is predicated on our ability to measure both (space and time). Without measurement time is meaningless don't you think? — TheMadFool
The parked car cannot be considered in isolation if we are to bring into consideration - as is done above - the relief of the owner when they see the car is still there in the morning. In that case, at a minimum, the system that needs to be considered includes the car and the owner, who certainly will change in the course of the night - possibly being sleepless and in any case being relieved when she sees the car is still there in the morning.
I suggest that, in order to make sense of the owner's worry, the system should also include all local car thieves and vandals. They will be out and about stealing cars during the night. The car is there in the morning because they chose to focus their efforts on other vehicles.
So it seems that change is critical to this example. By contrast, what if we were to postulate a universe containing only a single car and nothing else - no owner, no planet, no thieves? We'd further have to assume that the car was made of special atoms that never underwent radioactive decay and never shifted position. In that case we could say that there was no change and hence no time either. — andrewk
Change can be conceived of as simply a sequence of events. — TheMadFool
I see no reason to believe that a thing must be measurable to have real existence. Some philosophies distinguish between qualities and quantities, — Metaphysician Undercover
A sequence of events does not constitute change. Each event is a different object, and there is no change here, just a row of separate objects. To be called "change" you have to draw a connection between these events, and this is what the continuity of time does. — Metaphysician Undercover
thought of this too. The relational words ''before'', ''after'' require no time measurement. However these are, I think, a matter of sequentiality and sequentiality doesn't need time. For instance (sorry for being repetitive), 2 comes after 1 but before 3. See? We can make sense of change without involving time. The words ''before'' and ''after'' don't necessarily require a concept of time and these words are the only qualities of time. What do you think? — TheMadFool
Similarly, imagine a world without change - no movement, no chemical reactions, absolute motionlessness (heat death of the universe?). In such a world, time would be meaningless and it'd lose its value as part of the space-time frame of reference. — TheMadFool
I think that you are trying to make an argument by equivocation. In one sense, the word sequential refers to a succession or order in time, and in this sense, the words before and after are applicable. In another sense, the word sequential refers to a succession or order in space, and in this sense before and after are not applicable. — Metaphysician Undercover
Is stillness something we can even imagine or perceive? — sime
Is stillness something we can even imagine or perceive?
— sime
Watch a movie. Hit pause — TheMadFool
We don't need time to discuss change in space. So, my point is that change, per se, isn't adequate for a well developed notion of time. We need a specific type of change which I referred to as cyclical change. Without the cycle of day-night, year, atomic cycles etc. we wouldn't be able to use the concept of time at all. — TheMadFool
Change is essential for time. In a world without change time is meaningless. — TheMadFool
Extend your thought and everything is an invention, not a discovery.Time is an invention, not a discovery.
Your comments... — TheMadFool
Are you implying that I should infer that the movie is still given my shakey and unstable observation of it, or that I should literally experience a state of stillness when I hit pause? — sime
this requires time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Does it seem possible that there's an infinite continuum rather than an atomic digital stepping of movement, such that at any resolution some smaller motion can be defined? — AngleWyrm
So interesting, that likely it isn't just our invention. — ssu
What I want to ask is: is time a mental or physical thing? To me, it looks like the former because it is possible to imagine a universe at absolute rest - no change at all - and in such a universe time is meaningless. So, if time seems real to us then time must be a peculiar characteristic of our universe and others like it. — TheMadFool
This means that what is proper to the human mind, as "mental", is not the limits of the non-physical, or immaterial. — Metaphysician Undercover
all units of time are defined in terms of change. So, in a universe with no change there can be no time or, at least, time is immeasurable - both render time meaningless. — TheMadFool
Apply the concept of continuous motion to change. — AngleWyrm
What do you think of stuff like longitudes and latitudes? Do you think that time falls in the same category? — TheMadFool
Planck time is a unit of measure, and a theoretical one at that. I have yet to see anything measured in units of planck time, which sort of makes it useless. I'm suggesting the notion of an atomic quantum of time is maybe not an observable phenomenon in our universe. — AngleWyrm
I don't quite understand the question. Longitude and latitude are totally arbitrary, like the number of degrees in a circle. The measurements of time are based in real activities, the day, the year, etc.. — Metaphysician Undercover
Time is real and allows change — bahman
Time is real and allows change
— bahman
1.Change is necessary for time.
I don't know if this is a misconception but time is associated with change. Look at how the stoppage of time is portrayed in popular culture. In movies time halt is shown as motion/change slowing down and then stopping.
Imagine, as in the movies, everything stops moving/there is no change. If one is to stay true to the change-time paradigm, then time should stop or become nonexistent. — TheMadFool
2. Time is not necessary for change. We can have change without the time. Changes can be viewed as sequences of events without time. — TheMadFool
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