I don't see how the view I have expressed is 'presentism'. — Bartricks
To put it another way, this experience right now does not seem to be of the past, but of the present. If it is actually of the past, then it is illusory. — Bartricks
Yet on the time-as-soup view, what my experience represents to be the case is not the case. The objects of my experience (that is, not the experience itself, but what it represents to be the case) have in reality a quite different property - pastness - to the presentness that I perceive them to have.
How are such experiences not, therefore, illusory? — Bartricks
Separating the two is perhaps not the best way to think of things on a phenomenological level, — Umbra
Simply because the things of our present experience may contain the "property of pastness" does not mean that we are under the sway of an illusion. — Umbra
Again, I know that the light from the stars I am seeing is the result of an event that occurred long ago. — Umbra
I am not following you. Presentism is, as I understand it (and I am not at all sure I do), the view that only those things that have presentness actually exist. So it is not really a view about time, as such, but a view about existence. — Bartricks
Anyway, can you explain how the view that only present things exist would show that our perceptions of the present are accurate and not systematically mistaken? — Bartricks
My view is that it is absurd to think that we are not aware of the present moment. — Bartricks
You ought to consider that if everything is in the past, as you describe in the op — Metaphysician Undercover
You ought to consider that if everything is in the past, as you describe in the op, then things we are aware of are only memories. — Metaphysician Undercover
Awareness of the present is not an illusion, it's the apprehension of a real difference between future and past. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course, we only experience what's already past. Merely, light finite speed takes care of that by itself. Then there is the 300-500 millisecond delay required for the brain to make something out of what's happening. However, one goals continue across these gaps. Still, all in all, what consciousness thinks it is deciding right then and there has already been decided, which is bad news for hopeful free willers. — PoeticUniverse
what would it take for us to be accurately perceiving the present moment? — Bartricks
It would have to be instant; no perceiving; no figuring out; no processing at all. — PoeticUniverse
The present moment is 'now' - the problem, as I see it, is that if time is an objective material, then the experiences you have in the present moment give you information about events that occurred in the past, at the same time as representing them to be occurring now. Hence why on such a view we seem unable to experience the present moment. We get the impression we are experiencing the present moment, but in fact the content of such experiences are past moments, albeit represented to be present. Hence we are subject to a systematic illusion of presentness.
The way to overcome this and respect appearances is to reject the 'objective soup' view of time. What I suggest replacing it with is an 'external attitude' view of time. According to my replacement, 'what it is' for an event to be in the present is for that event to be being thought about in a certain kind of way, albeit not by us but by some third party - by Reason. — Bartricks
I think we're both saying something similar or the same: you say the present moment is the time of reasoning, whereas I say it is the time of consciousness. — Luke
I wouldn't define it like that, as those definitions are circular (given that to say that 'it is the time of consciousness' is equivalent to saying it "it is the moment consciousness is present" ). — Bartricks
Time is a set of attitudes that Reason adopts towards events. It has nothing to do with us reasoning. — Bartricks
I would note that others have defined the present moment differently, as the moment consciousness is present minus the brain processing time of approximately 300-500ms. — Luke
Your use of "consciousness is present" appears to conflate 'consciousness is present in me' and 'consciousness is at the present moment'. — Luke
This seems like a contradiction. Are you making a distinction between Reason and reasoning? What is it? — Luke
No, that wasn't a definition of the present moment. The person who wrote it was just saying what I'd already said, namely that if time is a kind of soup, then what we experience as the present moment has in fact already passed. — Bartricks
These events - these ones - appear to be happening right now. I think they probably are happening right now, not a fraction of a second ago. — Bartricks
Sure, if you define the temporal property of "now" or "the present moment" as being simultaneous with our conscious experiences — Luke
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