Yet, any memory is but one moment of experience. All the "build-up" of memory is given in an instance of experience. The story of the world is not given outside time, but within one moment. — TheWillowOfDarkness
It's not clear even what we mean by moment, in any case. A phenomenological moment cannot be a dimensionless 'point instant'; so what is a moment, and what are its boundaries? Wouldn't a phenomenological moment 'contain' both past and present, insofar as we conceive it at all? I mean, if a moment is not a dimensionless point, or boundary, if it has duration; then some parts of it must be prior to, and anticipatory of, other parts, which would mean it is like a microcosm of 'macroscopic' time embodying past, present and future. This would mean there is no pure present to our experience at all, even though when we think about it, it seems as though there must be. — John
You still misunderstanding radical contingency. It's not an actor on the world. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I hope this clarifies it. — John
Laws of nature are not conceived to act in the world, either; instead they are thought as what governs any acting in the world — John
Nancy Cartwright's take on this is that so-called 'laws' are useful descriptions of what is in play under certain conditions. I always think 'laws' is an odd analogy/metaphor, since human laws are after all made to be broken, or I'd never have smoked dope or parked on the pavement. — mcdoodle
Yes, I think that's right, that "so-called 'laws' are useful descriptions of what is in play under certain conditions"-the "certain conditions" being something like 'the totality of what has been recorded of human experience' — John
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