I think you're just saying that relativity doesn't entail an arrow of time, nor is it dependent on there being one. Nevertheless, relativity is consistent with there being an arrow of time. Relativity is not a theory of everything. — Relativist
This is more evidence for eternalism if you ask me. E.g., why is it that "metaphysical time" just happens to agree with the arrow of time placed by the direction of increased entropy? What a fortunate coincidence, since it would be a crazy world otherwise.
For eternalism, there is no problem here.
On the other hand, I guess presentists could just say that the world had a 50/50 chance, and fortunately, it came up heads. — Douglas Alan
Not sure what distinction you are drawing here. — SophistiCat
Except that an arrow of time assumes a dynamic world? — Luke
An arrow for time does not preclude eternalism. It is the direction of increasing entropy — Douglas Alan
Why is it not the direction of decreasing entropy? What difference does an arrow of time make in a static world? — Luke
Because the way that entropy works implies that people (and computers, animals, etc.) will remember the past and not the future, where the past is defined as the direction of decreasing entropy and the future is defined as the direction of increasing entropy. This is just how physics works, emergently. — Douglas Alan
What is the eternalist account? — Luke
The eternalist account is that at every point in time, a cognitive entity can remember events from the past and cannot remember events from the future. — Douglas Alan
Okay then, how are events 'made present' for a cognitive entity, such that they have a relative past to remember? I'm finding it odd for an eternalist to be using such presentist terms. — Luke
My apologies for the lack of clarity. I guess what I'm getting at is that we have dynamic accounts for how memory and other bodily functions work (neurons fire, light enters the eye, blood circulates, etc), but I don't see how this could work in a static world. — Luke
No offence, but I think I'll take the word of the associate professor over yours. — Luke
I'd be happy to read any articles by these other professors that provide an alternate definition of Eternalism, if you can direct me to them? — Luke
For the eternalist, the key challenge lies in explaining temporal phenomenology and
in explaining the apparent directionality of time. There has been significant work in
this area, but questions still remain: why do we have such a different relationship
with the future than with the past: why is it that effects typically precede their causes
when the laws of nature are symmetric: why do we remember the past, but not the
future
Eternalists, then, hold that the world as a whole is static in two senses: which events
exist does not change, and there is no sense in which the present moves. [1]
Eternalists accept what is known as the B-theory of time. This is the view that the
world is a static block of events ordered by the earlier than, later than, and simultaneous
with, relations. [1]
Presentists endorse the A-theory, since they hold that it is a genuine feature of a
presentist world which moment is present, and that this fact changes over time so that
different moments are present at different times. To say that a view accepts the A-theory
is really to say that it endorses the dynamical thesis, and to say that it endorses the
B-theory is to say that it rejects the dynamical thesis. [1]
Eternalism, on the other hand, is a static view that rejects temporal flow. Since it certainly
seems to many that there is temporal flow and change, this is a cost to eternalism.
At the least, the eternalist owes us an account of why it should seem that there are
such features in the world when there are not. [4.2]
My apologies for the lack of clarity. I guess what I'm getting at is that we have dynamic accounts for how memory and other bodily functions work (neurons fire, light enters the eye, blood circulates, etc), but I don't see how this could work in a static world. — Luke
There's nothing in eternalism that precludes things from evolving over time, since in eternalism there is definitely time, and at any given point in time, there are future times and a past times. And things will be different in those future and past times. Hence things change as time changes. — Douglas Alan
You just don't understand these metaphysical distinctions. As I mentioned physical law is identical under both of them. If you don't believe me, write to Miller and ask her yourself. She'll tell you just what I have.You appear to be claiming both that things can change and evolve over time, but also that nothing changes? — Luke
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