Fine. The total energy and momentum is conserved in the frames of each of the observers, but they're not the same to each other.The train and diesel fuel example above, was not about sensing motion or acceleration. Rather it was about viewing two study state references after all the acceleration is done. Both parties go into the final references, blind to any energy balance. This allows both references can apply the relative reference assumption in good conscience. — wellwisher
Fuel consumption does not change total energy. It just changes form from chemical energy to kinetic energy and heat. Total energy is conserved in both frames, but was never the same in either frame.If we did not know how much fuel was used such that the energy balance was left open ended, then the illusion would work.
It doesn't take energy to move or even accelerate. It takes force. The Earth happens to move quite a bit with significant acceleration, all without expenditure of energy. The velocity of Earth is entirely dependent on the frame in which it is considered. Its acceleration is not frame dependent, and is about .06% of the acceleration of a dropped rock here on Earth.The train and landscape may not be a good example, since rational common sense would say the landscape can't move, unless the entire earth was moved, which is unlikely due to the energy needed.
We actually have a starting number for energy, which is zero. Gravitaional potential energy is negative, and it seems to exactly cancel out the positive energy. Total momentum also seems to be zero from any viewpoint or frame, which is unintuitive, but it follows from the universe being infinite, to which any finite adjustment for frame is meaningless.When we look at the universe , we do not have an accurate energy balance. The idea of no preferred reference or center of the universe tells us that. We know the Conservation of energy applies, but we don't have a hard starting number.
Physical time is the concept time used in physics. — ChatteringMonkey
Physics as an empirical science doesn't make metaphysical claims, but only makes models that have predictive value. — ChatteringMonkey
How we use clocks and agree upon time, also don't necessarily make metaphysical claims about time. It's just a convention that has pragmatic value if you will. Let's call that conventional time. — ChatteringMonkey
We do not experience time as such, we experience change or motion. — ChatteringMonkey
Anything that makes definate claims about time goes beyond that and is metaphysics, because it cannot be veryfied or falsified by physical phenoma. That is metaphysical time. — ChatteringMonkey
I wouldn't call all of them metaphysicians since most people have no idea that some of their assumptions fall under the category of metaphysics. I like to confine that word to those that have given the matter explicit thought, such as those on these forums.OK, I think I understand what you are arguing now. You are saying that some metaphysicians such as presentists, claim that human beings experience the passing of time. Others. like eternalists claim that what human beings experience and call "the passing of time" , is not really the passing of time, it's something different. — Metaphysician Undercover
That was your claim. Mine was that clocks measure physical time (duration), and they do so accurately. Furthermore, I assume (cannot prove) that human experience is a physical (natural) process that measures time similar to clocks, so what we experience is physical time, not metaphysical time.Further, you have already claimed that there is something called "the passing of time", which physicists measure with clocks.
Yes, I've noticed this.My opinion, is that this distinction you make is unwarranted. I think that what a metaphysician refers to as "the passing of time" is the exact same thing as what the physicist refers to as "the passing of time".
Agree that they're measuring the very same thing, but none of it is metaphysical. The interpretational difference (flow or not flow, 4D spacetime or 3D state that changes at some unitless rate) is undetectable, and the rate of that flow (if it exists) is undetectable since experience would be the same if the rate was halved, tripled, or there was no rate.The two, the metaphysician, and the physicist, just utilize different measurement techniques, one the human experience, the other a physical clock. This is very clear from the fact that human beings synchronize their experience with the clock, in our day to day life. That the physicist employs a more accurate measurement technique than the metaphysician is irrelevant to the fact that the two are measuring the very same thing.
That was your claim. Mine was that clocks measure physical time (duration), and they do so accurately. Furthermore, I assume (cannot prove) that human experience is a physical (natural) process that measures time similar to clocks, so what we experience is physical time, not metaphysical time. — noAxioms
Agree that they're measuring the very same thing, but none of it is metaphysical. — noAxioms
I think we are talking past each other. — noAxioms
That means there is no metaphysical time in eternalism. — noAxioms
No i don't agree that concepts or abstractions are metaphysical, if we only use them because they have utility, and don't believe they literally exist. And I think that platonic realism is a prime example of metaphysics because there the concept are seen as real. — ChatteringMonkey
And i don't think that concepts in physics are metaphysical for the same reason, because they don't pretend to make claims about what is real. They only really care, or are supposed to anyway, about models having predictive value. The models are just equations, and like a map, they are not the world itself. — ChatteringMonkey
They may not be things in the tangible manner but they are things in terms of their effect on phenomena. — BrainW
How do we know that time has an effect on phenomena? Does it make things change, or is it merely a measure of change, that is the question. — ChatteringMonkey
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