fishfry I don't think we're living in the past. I thought you were saying that it was his opinion that we were. If he agrees with me, then his surname is unjust. — Bartricks
In some of his later writings he expressed that idea. I can't imagine slurring the guy for his name. Do you even know who he is? I'm going to let this go. Sorry I mentioned it. — fishfry
Another thread stumbling over its lack of any definitions, in particular the ones it needs, that having would probably resolve the question asked. It's your thread, what do you mean by past? By present? Because you exclude any insights due to physics, I have to assume you're asking about the phenomenology of perception, yes? As to the possibility of illusion, by what standard?This event - this one - seems to me to be present. It is, I think, occurring 'now'. — Bartricks
Because you exclude any insights due to physics, I have to assume you're asking about the phenomenology of perception, yes? As to the possibility of illusion, by what standard? — tim wood
Another thread stumbling over its lack of any definitions, — tim wood
It's your thread, what do you mean by past? — tim wood
It seems like the question of the OP might lead to a discussion of some interest, but you appear to have tied a knot in it. — tim wood
we live in a perceptual present, but in terms of the world, it's always already passed. — tim wood
As tim wood has said, you are stumbling along in this post and there's nothing but your own feet to blame. — Umbra
There is no "illusion" of the present in the way you are framing it. This is not to say we don't "lag behind" our experiences; — Umbra
I think that's all baloney and that it is grossly implausible that what we take to be the present is in fact the past. — Bartricks
The term the present connotes two different, but related, concepts: the mathematical present (that fleeting point on a real number line representing the procession of time), and the colloquial sense of the present, which is rooted in perception.This event - this one - seems to me to be present. It is, I think, occurring 'now'.
But if time is some kind of wierd soup in which we're all slowly drowning, then there will surely be a lag between some event occurring and the event of my mind representing it to be occuring, occuring.
If that's true, then the mental event of mine that represents this - this now - to be occurring, is representing as occuring now something that has, in fact, already occurred. This event - this one - is in the past, not the present. I perceive it to be in the present - it has presentness to me - but in reality it is past.
If that's true, then doesn't that mean we are subject to a systematic illusion of the present? — Bartricks
If - if - our experiences lag behind the reality they are giving us an experience of, then we are subject to an illusion of the present, for what our experience represents to be present is actually past.
Of course, we only experience what's already past. — PoeticUniverse
But it does not follow that my experience of the present moment is therefore illusory. — Umbra
The real question is; what happens when we experience mind itself, turning observer and observed into the same object? — Tzeentch
And so on. — Bartricks
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