Yeah. Let's talk about the thing-in-itself ... without actually talking. I will enjoy your silence. — apokrisis
Speculate away.speculative realism, speculative idealism, or speculative metaphysics. — schopenhauer1
Speculate away. — apokrisis
Time is more fundamental than motion. Time is simply one of the properties of objects of experience. Time does not imply motion. Just because there is time does not mean there is motion. You need change, i.e. difference between points in time, in order to speak of motion. And not any kind of change but change in position. — Magnus Anderson
A 6-month-later followup to this thread, the answer to which might require familiarity with Buddhism. Is this accurate:
Buddhists say true existents have an unchanging essence.
Processists say true existents do NOT have an unchanging essence.
Though apparently opposed, they're actually pointing to the same thing:
Stuff doesn't have an unchanging essence. One just calls this stuff
non-existent and the other calls it existent, a matter of semantics. — rachMiel
See the short dissertation by Shaviro (who is much more lucid than most writers on Whitehead and much better at explanation than me)I have been doing just that, reading Elizabeth Kraus's book The Metaphysics of Experience and focusing in on Whitehead's take on persistence, eternal and enduring objects. Here's a quote from Process and Reality — rachMiel
Thanks, prothero. I ran into the article you linked to yesterday, always thought it was well written. :-) — rachMiel
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