Sure, but how is "No" coming into this. Why isn't that T1 and T2? That's what I've named it--T1 and T2. You're saying I can't do that. Well, why not? Why do you "need another premise"? There's something you're thinking that, to me, you're not expressing very well, because this comment makes no sense to me.the clock indicates "10:42" is, the clock indicates 10:42, just like the clock indicates "10:43" is the clock indicate 10:43. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, but how is "No" coming into this. Why isn't that T1 and T2? Why do you "need another premise"? — Terrapin Station
I don't know how to make it any clearer, except to explain to you that 1 is not the same as 2. 10:42 is what the clock reads. Then 10:43 is what the clock reads. We could assume that the clock indicates "the time". Then we have, "the time is 10:42", and then "the time is 10:43". Now you propose that we replace "the time" with T1 and T2. On what principle do you replace, something identical, "the time", with something different, 1 and 2? — Metaphysician Undercover
T1 is the first time variable. T2 is the second time variable. — Terrapin Station
We can't call them both T1, as the values are different. And we want a way to distinguish the values. Is that clear to you? — Terrapin Station
Yes, now do you agree that "T1" and "T2" implies a difference in time? — Metaphysician Undercover
And, that the difference described by T1 and T2 can only be supported by an assumption such as "time is passing"? — Metaphysician Undercover
is it clear to you that the difference in the values of T1 and T2, is due to the fact that time is passing? — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, "time is passing" = "change/motion is occurring." — Terrapin Station
Right, so you're instead asking why I believe that time is identical to change/motion. — Terrapin Station
It's due to a functional analysis, over many years, countless contexts, etc. of what we're referring to with "time." I'm not referring to what people have in mind, what their specific beliefs about time are in that. It's not a survey of beliefs. It's a functional analysis of what is being actually referred to, extensionally, that is; how the term is being used, etc. — Terrapin Station
That's what I've always been asking you, — Metaphysician Undercover
Clearly that's a faulty functional analysis — Metaphysician Undercover
x is different from x' because x is at T1, and x' is at T2. The difference between x and x' is based in the assumed difference between T1 and T2. — Metaphysician Undercover
To support your claim, requires that you demonstrate how there is a relationship of equivalence between x and T1, — Metaphysician Undercover
it is very clear that what we refer to with "time" is something different from what we refer to with "change", — Metaphysician Undercover
The difference is that time is any change/motion, of anything. Or in other words, it ranges over, in the sense of being identical to, ALL changes/all motion. The T variable represents this. — Terrapin Station
But time isn't something other than those changes/motions. — Terrapin Station
That's not what you said though. You said that there is one state x, and another state x'. Your claim was that you know that x' is different from x, because x was at T1, and x' was at T2. You also claim to know that T1 is different from T2, because of a different reading on the clock. If x now becomes the clock, we have circular reasoning. You now know that x is different from x' because they represent different numbers on the clock, not because one is at T1 and the other at T2, only because 2 is different than 3. So how do you know that any time has past, just because there is a different number on the clock?It's not an equivalence. It's that x (the clock) is in one state, which is T1, and then it's in another state--it has changed. So that's T2. Change is what we're naming with T1 and T2. "X" on the other hand, is a variable for the clock. — Terrapin Station
Now you have taken a generalization, an abstraction, change, which is what we say about any change, that it is a change, and assigned the name of a particular thing "time" to that abstract thing. So either that particular thing which you refer to as the "T variable" has no meaning other than as the abstract generalization, "change", in which case the T variable is redundant, or else it refers to a real particular thing, time, and therefore it could not be the same as the generalized "change". Which is it, is time a thing to be referred to, or is it just a generalized "change"?. — Metaphysician Undercover
How do you infer that there is something other than this, which is called time? I — Metaphysician Undercover
If there is nothing other than the change from a 2 to a 3, what is this "T variable"? — Metaphysician Undercover
That's not what you said though. — Metaphysician Undercover
The clock with "10:42" displayed is x, the clock with "10:43" displayed is x'. "10:42" is different than "10:43 — Terrapin Station
You also claim to know that T1 is different from T2, because of a different reading on the clock. — Metaphysician Undercover
If x now becomes the clock, we have circular reasoning. — Metaphysician Undercover
ou now know that x is different from x' because they represent different numbers on the clock, — Metaphysician Undercover
So how do you know that any time has past, just because there is a different number on the clock? — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm not sure I understand all of your comments there, but it is "a set of things to be referred to" if you like, namely all changes. I'm not saying it's an abstraction. Changes aren't abstraction, they're real, particular occurrences. Time is those occurrences, it's all changes/motion. (And at this point I'm just saying the same thing again, really.) — Terrapin Station
You might be mistaking my definitional statements for an argument. "Time is identical to change" isnt' an argument, it's a statement or definition of what time is. Definitions will ultimately be "circular" if you go enough steps, otherwise they're not doing the job they're supposed to do. — Terrapin Station
I believe this--and this is the case for many things I believe--due to years of functional analysis in many different contexts. It's more of an empirical observation than anything like an argument. — Terrapin Station
It's pretty simple though: if one takes time to be identical to change (and that's a definition, not an argument), then that there's a change tells us that there is time. — Terrapin Station
Once two people get into a ding-dong it's hard to butt in! I liked what you said anyway, Cava :) — mcdoodle
Of course his argument is about the unreality of time, but I find it helpful in thinking about time. — Cavacava
OK, there is a set of things named "changes". You want to refer to those things under a different name, "time". What justifies this change of name? — Metaphysician Undercover
I've been trying to dispel that illusion, but TS is persistent. — Metaphysician Undercover
it's not an name change, It's a statement of an identity relationship. What justifies asserting the identity relationship is the years of functional analysis re how "time" is used--what it actually refers to, functionally.
Do you understand that part so that I don't have to explain it again? I know you don't agree with it, but I shouldn't have to keep explaining it as my view. — Terrapin Station
As I said, I think your functional analysis is faulty. — Metaphysician Undercover
Try, as I suggested, replacing "change" with "time", in any common use of the word "change". You will find that the meaning of the statement is greatly changed. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you understand that? — Terrapin Station
No, you've insisted that time is change, time is identical to change, so why can't we switch names? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's due to a functional analysis, over many years, countless contexts, etc. of what we're referring to with "time." I'm not referring to what people have in mind, what their specific beliefs about time are in that. It's not a survey of beliefs. It's a functional analysis of what is being actually referred to, extensionally, that is; how the term is being used, etc. — Terrapin Station
if you determine that people are actually referring to something which is not what they think they are referring to, haven't you misunderstood them? — Metaphysician Undercover
That would follow if the aim were to talk about persons' beliefs, how they think about things, etc. But for at least the third time now, that's not what I'm doing. I'm not referring to what people have in mind, what their specific beliefs about time are. It's not a survey of beliefs. — Terrapin Station
If you're not referring to what people believe about time, then what are you referring to, your own personal belief? — Metaphysician Undercover
What I'm doing is looking at what actually obtains in relation to how terms/concepts are being used, from more or a "behavioral" perspective. Thus, when people are believing myths, fictions, ambiguities, incoherencies, etc. (as might be the case with various terms/concepts/etc.) we can talk about what's really going on in relation to those terms/concepts/etc. with respect to things that do exist. — Terrapin Station
This appears to be irrelevant, if anything more than gibberish. Perhaps you could explain? — Metaphysician Undercover
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