Why can anything exist permanently? — Terrapin Station
There is a start of time, there must be something permanent causally before that to create time. — Devans99
Doesn't "permanent" only make sense in relation to time? Permanent refers to something lasting for all time (at least of a particular range), no? What would it refer to outside of that? — Terrapin Station
So the requirement that something exist permanently has to be satisfied by something outside of time. — Devans99
So what would you say that "permanent" refers to in general? — Terrapin Station
Not quite sure what you mean. — Devans99
I just did give it a definition as a 4D object in space rather spacetime. — Devans99
What is the fourth dimension supposed to be? — Terrapin Station
I don't think that the idea of a fourth spatial dimension is coherent aside from it being a sort of "game" we can play with the way we've constructed mathematics. — Terrapin Station
But okay. So "permanence" isn't referring to a state in your usage. It's a name for a type of object? — Terrapin Station
Unsupported assertion. Meet you burden to show a start of time requires B-theory.The A theory of time is impossible with a start of time: if only now exists and that is taken away, then there is nothing left at all to create time. A start of time requires the B theory: something must timelessly preexist time to create it. — Devans99
The first cause is, by definition, uncaused. You know, like God.Every present moment causes the next, so it's reasonable to expect the initial moment would cause the next.
— Relativist
What causes the initial moment? It has to be the start of time. It has to be something in the world causing something else in the real world, so time seems real. — Devans99
Unsupported assertion. Meet you burden to show a start of time requires B-theory. — Relativist
The first cause is, by definition, uncaused. You know, like God. — Relativist
The opposite of 4d spacetime, presentism, is incompatible with a start of time: — Devans99
How is something permanent in your sense of that term supposed to start time? Isn't that something it would have to do? — Terrapin Station
It is logically impossible for there to be a moment of time prior to the first moment of time.Something permanent has to preexist time to cause time. — Devans99
Unsupported assertion. I gave a scenario that is internally consistent. You have to show ot's impossible. You're just restating your own unproven assumptions.. The only way to exist permanently and uncaused is outside of time. — Devans99
At any rate, any motion, any change would be time, so you couldn't "start time" from outside of time. — Terrapin Station
Maybe God's first motion creates some form of time/causality? — Devans99
It is logically impossible for there to be a moment of time prior to the first moment of time — Relativist
The state of affairs at t0 did not "come into being". It exists by brute fact.[/quote]Unsupported assertion. I gave a scenario that is internally consistent. You have to show ot's impossible. You're just restating your own unproven assumptions.
[QuoteIf you exist 'always' in time then you have no coming into being; so you can't exist. — Relativist
Any motion, any change would BE (identical to) time. You can't have motion/change without time, because motion/change is what time is. — Terrapin Station
I think time enables motion. Change maybe possible without time. — Devans99
This is wrong. Time is identical to change/motion. — Terrapin Station
It's not possible to move timelessless, because motion is identical to time. — Terrapin Station
Re at any rate, so why would we need to posit something that can't move or change in order to say that then something moves/changes? — Terrapin Station
Are you saying you think time does not change for the empty space (where there is no motion) and only changes for the clock (where there is motion)? That does not make sense to me. — Devans99
Photons can move the whole length of the universe in no time. — Devans99
Presentism is impossible; — Devans99
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