Devans99
If you believe the past did exist then you believe it no longer does exist and that it therefore does not exist. — Luke
Devans99
Never heard the term 'presentism.' Does such a thing exist if our biology requires a small lag time in our experience of 'now' in essence turning into 'then?' — julian kroin
have this thought; entropy explains everything (though I 'm not privy to that explanation) — julian kroin
Frank Apisa
The low entropy of the universe points to a start of time which would rule out presentism. — Devans99
Devans99
"A start of time" is an essential to where you want to go — Frank Apisa
Luke
The past does not exist but it provably did exist (else the present would not exist). — Devans99
From the fact the past did exist and from 'only now exists' we reach 'only now always existed'. — Devans99
Devans99
Let''s say I don't accept your assertion that the present would not exist unless the past did exist. How are you going to prove that? — Luke
"Only now always existed" is grammatically incorrect and incoherent, combining both present and past tenses.. It attempts to refer to a past tense existence of the present moment ("existed"). The present moment does not exist in the past, by definition. — Luke
Luke
I think you could say that every effect in the present has a cause in the past else it would not exist so therefore the past must have existed. — Devans99
What I mean is: does the state 'only now exists' apply to the past, IE did 'only then exist' in the past if you see what I mean. Because if 'only now exists' applies to all time then there cannot be a start of time (because that would be creation from nothing). — Devans99
Devans99
That's just repeating the same assertion. It's not proof — Luke
Presentists don't need to accept the assumption about past existence - it's not part of presentism — Luke
Luke
1. The effect is in the present
2. The cause must exist
3. The cause must come prior to the effect
4. So 'prior to now' must have existed. — Devans99
I think thats a debatable statement, see here for example: — Devans99
Devans99
Banno
Devans99
Devans99
sime
Devans99
Cool. That shows that you are working with an unhelpful definition of infinity. Treat it rather as an unbounded number larger than any real number. — Banno
Frank Apisa
sime
289
I am under the impression that those who discount presentism do so, because they interpret presentism as a variant of realism about time and causality, where the ontological basis of that temporal realism is the present. — sime
Devans99
Artemis
Luke
(PA) Always, only present things exist. — Devans99
Devans99
What do you take this to mean? — Luke
Luke
So as we go back in time, still only the present exists. — Devans99
So the present ALWAYS existed. That implies no start of time. — Devans99
Then if there was a start of time; that would be creation ex nihilo of a sort - creation without time itself which seems impossible — Devans99
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