You see how you keep dropping stasis out of the discussion. You simply presume the thing that gives the idea of "change" any crisp meaning can be taken for granted.
Once you start honestly asking yourself about how stasis could be the case, then the lightbulb might go off. — apokrisis
I am only proceeding now according to your assumptions. You claimed that time, and change are emergent. — Metaphysician Undercover
Don't you assume symmetry, and isn't symmetry a form of stasis? — Metaphysician Undercover
You are the one who takes stasis for granted, — Metaphysician Undercover
Hardly. I've said it is emergent as an equilibrium state - flux arriving at its own inherent limitations. And "time" speaks to the time it takes to run down a gradient of symmetry-breaking. Time emerges from the fact that such a change can't be instant when it comes to our Universe. — apokrisis
Now which is the method, and which is the world? If symmetry is the maths and modeling of the real world stasis, then what is the symmetry which is prior to symmetry breaking, other than stasis? And if there is stasis prior to symmetry-breaking, isn't it true that you have assumed stasis, or taken stasis for granted, as the starting point for your ontology?As I've said, symmetry is a way to model stasis because it is the maths of differences that don't make a difference. And so it is a model of physical equilbrium situations, where there are differences, and they don't make a difference.
Math's problem is that it is timeless and energyless in being basically a spatial or geometric conception of things. So symmetry maths has a static character just due to the way maths is derived. You are risking confusing the stasis of the method with the stasis (and flux) of the world the method is used to model. — apokrisis
Ok, so prior to symmetry-breaking there must be symmetry? — Metaphysician Undercover
If symmetry is the maths and modeling of the real world stasis, then what is the symmetry which is prior to symmetry breaking, other than stasis? — Metaphysician Undercover
The Planck scale tells us there is a "size" below which any normal talk of spacetime or energy density ceases to be physically meaningful. So like it or not, that ought to be factored into any modern discussion of metaphysics. — apokrisis
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