Its more I suspect things are a certain way (finite, discrete) and I'm trying to analyse the evidence to see if there is support for it. I maybe wrong... time will tell.
I feel obliged to state that I don't necessarily think that Time doesn't exist, but that we have used it quite irresponsibly as a sort of leash on People. I believe you were the person who talked about — Despues Green
The human mind cannot escape from the gravity of time, if you did then that’s when they called it spirituality. But who is actually spiritually enlightened, I would argue very few? All of us are trapped within these cycles...
According to Einstein, you can slow down your progress through time by moving at close to the speed of light. So we have some control over time. So it counts as a degree of freedom in the same way as space does - you can choose how fast you move in the time dimension/direction.
We have some sort of personal, biological, subjective 'now'. Then there is an objective, physical, shared 'now'. At least it appears to be shared - it is unclear to me from special relativity whether it could be said there are multiple 'nows'. So there maybe a biological length of 'now' - the limit of what you can sense. The question remains is there a physical length of 'now'?
...it's Subjective only in the realm of our innate Passions which we have to find by being exposed to them and then honing in on them.... but again, that's Subjective because it's entirely on our own clocks.
Again, Time is a measurement that we, Humans, created. Whether you want to use the terms "Timeless" or "Eternal" doesn't matter, the point is that it is absolutely possible for all of this to just always have existed. And you don't need Time to make that measurement, because Space is independent of Time, it only needed the Space. — Despues Green
The original post is hazy as to what it's asking or asserting. My point is that nothing is "real", and the "length of now" is a variable, a potentiality, it depends on whether what we perceive as "reality" is finite or infinite. — whollyrolling
Both time and space drop away as we understand them. The grounds of existence for the natural are not the same grounds for the spiritual. — Daniel Cox
So time exists, is real IMO — Devans99
Wonder how far we could take this. How slow could time be made to run for a human injected with a large dose of designer hormones? — Devans99
The things we perceive as "time and space" are inseparable and a requirement of this process because without them there's no death, and without death there's no motivation.
If it were only space, there would be no movement. So time exists, is real IMO. I do not see space as independent from time in this universe - things of duration 0 seconds do not exist so time seems required for existence. — Devans99
Nothing is real? Even if we were in a simulation, there would be (maybe) system time and base reality time and both would have a start and be in some sense real. — Devans99
But it is absolutely possible for things to just always have existed and that's it — Despues Green
Similar to how you assume that a Higher Power in God existed to create these things we're talking about — Despues Green
Now is so small in length that to me it cannot be measured or understood with the human's limited capability... — RBS
We perceive "reality" differently from other organisms. — whollyrolling
I see that Humans have a very broad and powerful purpose, which is to harness the power of the Universe as a resource. — Despues Green
Our motivations are our individual Passions and Imaginations and thus they should be nurtured. — Despues Green
Imagine a clock travelling at almost the speed of light zooming past one of those super slowmo cameras. — Devans99
I do believe there is overwhelming evidence that we are not living in a simulation. — Devans99
How many particles in the observable universe? 3.28 x 10^80. No computer could manage the computations. — Devans99
So you think Bill Gates is running this simulation in his garage circa 1980-something? "Check this out guys, I'm simulating a model of the entire universe, every particle and living organism in existence, for my next trick I'm going to create Windows 3.0"? — whollyrolling
"Passions and imaginations" are not motivators, they're compulsions. A motivator would be the thing that moves you toward a compulsion. It's also the thing that moves you toward nurturing. — whollyrolling
But the Power in Passion and Imagination that they are compulsions only furthers my point that they are innate and what we are destined to do. — Despues Green
Compulsions can be controlled, and they don't necessitate "design". That something feels good doesn't necessarily add or subtract meaning from life, especially intrinsic meaning, which would be objective and would persist regardless of the existence of humans as a species or each human as an individual. — whollyrolling
Just because I believe life is intrinsically meaningless doesn't mean I believe it's practically meaningless. I derive meaning continually.
So if time is discrete, the unit of time / physical length of 'now' is truly microscopically small - the length of a biological 'now' would be enormous in comparison. — Devans99
So we have no way of knowing if time is made up of point-like instants, or just tiny but nonzero intervals.
It's the ancient mystery of the continuum. — fishfry
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