With B time, you still have the problem (for intuition) that it either appeared "out of nowhere" or always existed. You don't have an infinite regress, but the intuitive problem isn't the regress so much as either appearing "out of nowhere" or always existing. — Terrapin Station
Something changes or moves. That is time — Terrapin Station
Something always existing makes sense. You can't get something from nothing so something must have always existed. Could it be what always existed is the B theory version of time and space? — Devans99
I see it more as time is something that enables change and enables cause/effect. Time flows even when nothing changes. If you have a clock and empty space next to it, time is changing equally for both. — Devans99
There wouldn't be a specifiable number, it would be an infinity. — Terrapin Station
Also, why would there have to be a first member for it to exist? That's contrary to what we'd be positing in the first place. — Terrapin Station
Which is not a number. Basic maths says there is no number X greater than all others because X+1>X. No infinite numbers. So my proof holds. — Devans99
Would you exist if the moment of your conception was removed from time? — Devans99
There has to be a first moment of time (t) for the next moment (t+1) to exist, — Devans99
You're not being a mathematical realist, by the way, are you? — Terrapin Station
If I were to always exist, there couldn't be a moment of conception for me. — Terrapin Station
No, there doesn't. If it extends back infinitely then there can't be a first moment.(Also acknowledging that there are no real "moments," there's just real change or motion.) — Terrapin Station
I believe nature is fundamentally logical and that it can be accurately described using logic IE maths. — Devans99
Maybe I'm misunderstanding you but that's the B theory of time? — Devans99
With either the A theory or B theory, you can have infinite time or not — Terrapin Station
A-series terms which leads to nonsense when discussing a B-series view. So "could have done otherwise" is an example of an A version of the definition. — noAxioms
Both "appeared out of nowhere" and "always existed" are A-series references, which of course are incompatible with B series. The block view just is. There is no 'beginning to exist' of it, because that puts time outside the block, which is not how the view depicts time.With B time, you still have the problem (for intuition) that it either appeared "out of nowhere" or always existed. — Terrapin Station
A-series terms which leads to nonsense when discussing a B-series view. So "could have done otherwise" is an example of an A version of the definition. — noAxioms
The block view just is (my emphasis). — noAxioms
That would be two times: The one in which the block is created, and another that is a dimension of the block. Eternalism is not a view of there being two kinds of time.You can't get outside of it with because either the block of time always was there or there was nothing and then time suddenly appeared. — Terrapin Station
No tensed verbs for starters. The universe cannot be a created object for instance. There is no 'there was no universe, and then later there was'. If that happens, there are two kinds of time, and you're talking a different view. The other kind if time is the one that the deity lives in, except then the deity lives within something he didn't create, so that's a problem, but not my problem.Well, what sort of non A-series terms are there? — Mr Bee
There is no 'the present' or 'now' in the view, so I'm not sure what is being referred to with that comment. OK, you use 'present' as a verb, so perhaps you mean some other declaration of being. To be honest, the view doesn't assert 'presence' at all since none of the view seems to require it. The angles of a square are all right angles whether or not the square is present. I've thus never really asserted it. I'm quite in the minority on that point since everybody presumes that presence, but it is a premise, not something that can be proven without assuming the conclusion.I actually think the attempt to remove A-series terms from a description of the B-series is what leads to nonsense (such as this whole "triviality problem" that people are currently discussing about the A vs. B theories of time). Just take what you said later as an example:
The block view just is (my emphasis).
— noAxioms
What could the "is" mean other than that it is present, or that it exists now (both being A-series terms)?
B-series descriptions should simply not make reference to the present, which has no meaning in the view. All of Terrapin Station's comments made reference to it, so they're A-descriptions.Of course, I imagine you don't want to say that you mean that by your use of the term, but what else could it possibly be? A tenseless use of the term? What could that possibly mean?
I've also seen 'proofs' that the presentist view cannot be, but they all seem to be faulty.Now as for my own views on the matter, I think that the B-theory of time does make alot of A-series terms irrelevant, but does not eliminate them altogether. The idea that things "will happen" or "did happen" make no sense in a world where time doesn't pass.
There is no 'the present' or 'now' in the view, so I'm not sure what is being referred to with that comment. — noAxioms
I can agree that I find little meaning to the block universe existing or not. I see no need for distinction between the two. But as for the run of the mill B-theorist, they'd not ever say that the universe exists now, or it once existed, or will exist. Any of those is like saying it is located to the left of the invisible pink unicorn: a relation with an entity not acknowledged.What I am saying is that first part of your sentence, that there is no "present" or "now" doesn't make sense. There is no meaning to the idea that the "block universe exists" without stating that it either exists now, did exist, or will exist. — Mr Bee
History is littered with such statements. Are you the only one that is correct about it?Just look at our conversation right now, for instance which is embedded in the now.
Fine. Pick another word, and that word also probably should not be used, since it is a word used for objects. Does the last ice age exist? It is part of the history of Earth, as is the process where the sun swallows it. You seem to want a different word since you disapprove of it being said that those events 'exist' in the same way that I exist. Then I would still balk at that same word being used to say that the universe exists, since it doesn't seem to be an event or a created object or anything.As a result, I believe that all views about time are "presentist" to the extent that everything that is said to "exist" is presently existing. It is sort of trivial, but that is what "exists" technically means (as again, it is a present tense term).
But as for the run of the mill B-theorist, they'd not ever say that the universe exists now, or it once existed, or will exist. — noAxioms
I think a lot of people see the universe as an object like that, coming into being somehow from non-being, just like every actual object in the universe. I don't. I think it contradicts what a universe should be. — noAxioms
Are you saying you don't understand the view or you simply disagree with it? It's hard to tell from you posts. — noAxioms
You seem to want a different word since you disapprove of it being said that those events 'exist' in the same way that I exist. Then I would still balk at that same word being used to say that the universe exists, since it doesn't seem to be an event or a created object or anything. — noAxioms
I think a lot of people see the universe as an object like that, coming into being somehow from non-being, just like every actual object in the universe. I don't. I think it contradicts what a universe should be. — noAxioms
I dislike calling it B-theory since that name includes growing block view, which is still presentism.I have an understanding of the B-theory and the A-theory of time which I believe captures the essence what most people understand the view to be. That version of the B-theory I also happen to disagree with but that is not something I will go into here. — Mr Bee
All three of those are circular definitions, and thus not really definitions.My question is what other meaning of "exists" could there be if it doesn't refer to "presently existing", "did exist" or "will exist".
:brow:I dislike calling it B-theory since that name includes growing block view, which is still presentism. — noAxioms
How so? What's so circular about them?All three of those are circular definitions, and thus not really definitions. — noAxioms
I did my best to describe how I use the word in the tail of my prior post. You didn't comment on it. — noAxioms
What does "is" mean here? I take it that "is" means that it currently is, but then again, I'd think you would have a problem with that so if you have an alternative conception then please take this opportunity to offer one. I still have yet to understand what other sense of "exists" there is if there is one.It means 'is a member of' [the universe], and not just 'is a current member of'. — noAxioms
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