Eternalists have such accounts: Time is real. It is locally ordered. (I word it this way just to account for Special Relativity.) For every point in local time there is an immediately past point in local time and an immediately future point in local time. People, and other representationalist systems, such as fancy computers, can represent the past and the future relative to the point in time where the person or computer is located. They can understand the laws of nature well enough to make certain predictions about the future points in time from the past points in time. They can record information about the past in their memories, etc."the eternalist owes us an account of why it should seem that there are such features [of change, temporal flow] in the world when there are not." — Luke
Miller writes this:According to the Kristie Miller article cited in the OP, the difference between Presentism and Etetnalism is not only their differing views on existence, but also their staticity/dynamism. — Luke
Now either Miller has no understanding of the position, or she's talking about something completely different. The view denies the existence of a preferred moment called 'the present' and hence the ST part is nonsense. I've actually heard of such a view, which is presentism without the movement, but Miller doesn't seem to be talking about that since she correctly states that all events at all times exist equally, which is not true of a model with a present that stays put like that.Thus eternalists endorse the following pair of theses:
Eternalist Ontological Thesis (EOT): Past, present, and future times and events exist.
Static Thesis (ST): The present does not move: which moment is the present moment does
not change. — Miller
I'd say there is no 'the present' to do any moving. 'The present' would be just any event's self reference, and that, by definition, cannot move.Then I take it you agree with all of the following:
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. — Luke
Also known in physics as 4-dimensional spacetime. 3D Space and time are separate under presentism.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]
I haven't seen the dynamical thesis, but this seems right.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.
The subjective flow of time is an illusion, illustrated empirically with the twins scenario in relativity. If people could detect the actual flow of time, then they'd be able to detect movement due to the subjective slowing of clocks when they're moving fast, wheras if it were an illusion, any traveler would notice no difference. This of course isn't easy to test given the cost of the experiment, but it is there.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 s
Eternalists have such accounts: Time is real. It is locally ordered. (I word it this way just to account for Special Relativity.) For every point in local time there is an immediately past point in local time and an immediately future point in local time. — Douglas Alan
Under the spotlight theory, such an eternalist will say that time is like a movie reel. It's all there all at once: past, future, and present. Only there's a spotlight that runs down the movie reel illuminating one frame at a time, in chronological order.
Most eternalists will say, "Exactly! Only there's no need for the stupid spotlight." — Douglas Alan
If you want a version of eternalism that works for you, start with the spotlight theory. And then convince yourself that you don't need a spotlight. Or remain committed to the spotlight if you wish. It's no skin off of my teeth either way. — Douglas Alan
The subjective flow of time is an illusion, illustrated empirically with the twins scenario in relativity. If people could detect the actual flow of time, then they'd be able to detect movement due to the subjective slowing of clocks when they're moving fast, wheras if it were an illusion, any traveler would notice no difference. — noAxioms
The argument is simply that relativity of simultaneity isn't sufficient by itself to imply a block universe. An additional premise is required, which is that all events to the past of any observer's surface of simultaneity are fixed and certain. — Andrew M
"Static" is an unfortunate choice of a word in Miller's article — SophistiCat
But there is still time in the eternalist's account, just as in the presentist's! — SophistiCat
Alas, I'm not sure where the confusion is arising. If you believe that GR entails eternalism, the forward direction of time is given straight-forwardly by the direction of increasing entropy. (Modulo situations in which there is no such clear direction, such as post-heat death of the universe. But since there won't be philosophers existing then to worry about the problem or to experience what it is like to live in this time, this would seem to be moot to an eternalist.) — Douglas Alan
GR doesn't know anything about entropy - it's not part of the theory. — SophistiCat
They have to limit themselves to GR's coordinate time, which increases monotonically (in simply connected topologies), but in an arbitrarily chosen direction. — SophistiCat
Therefore, if it is possible for the entropy gradient to reverse itself along the length of one worldline, then a relativity fundamentalist faces a problem, because her theory of time is not sensitive to this change. — SophistiCat
I consider the moving spotlight view to be a hybrid of Presentism and Eternalism, since it contains all times/events (Eternalism) plus motion (Presentism). If you remove the spotlight, you remove the motion, and then you need to account for the appearance of motion. This is exactly the problem for eternalists. — Luke
Not movement. I refer to the rate at which the present moment progresses into say a moment one second hence. No device measures this, and the subjective experience of a human is no exception to this. If there was, one could design an objective clock that would stay in sync with any other objective clock regardless of where it was or how much it has been accelerated around.The subjective flow of time is an illusion, illustrated empirically with the twins scenario in relativity. If people could detect the actual flow of time, then they'd be able to detect movement due to the subjective slowing of clocks when they're moving fast, whereas if it were an illusion, any traveler would notice no difference.
— noAxioms
It's unclear to me what the illusion is that you are referring to. What 'movement' is going undetected? What 'movement' would be detectable if "people could detect the actual flow of time"? — Luke
This is totally wrong. The sole observation from which Einstein did his SR work was the apparent constant speed of light. From that, all the things above were predicted, not measured ahead of time.How to interpret data is subjective. The sole thing Einstein noticed was the observation that external motion changes the size and some of the rate of change within the object. That's it. — Gregory
Indeed, he didn't do them himself.Since he didn't do the experiments, he probably didn't even come up with that.
The appearance of motion is something that is represented in your brain. Where else would there be an appearance of motion? Since physics is the same under presentism and eternalism, your brain is going to represent the same things under either presentism and eternalism. Consequently, if your brain represents the appearance of motion under presentism, it will do so under eternalism, and vice versa. — Douglas Alan
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: why does the present seem to us to have a particularly salient quality that other moments lack; what are the cognitive apparatuses that underlie our experience of temporality and how do they function to create temporal phenomenology; what is the evolutionary significance of the phenomenology of temporal flow and to what extent is the phenomenology of temporal flow essential for agency. — Kristie Miller
I think I'm up to that explanation, which, from a physicalist point of view, can be explained through entropy and evolution, but almost nobody actually accepts physical monism deep down. I think I have but it was a multi-year struggle to shake off the biases put there by a very proficient liar.Except that there is actually no motion according to Eternalism. I would imagine that it's much easier to explain why we perceive motion if there actually is motion than if there actually isn't. My point, again, is better expressed by Kristie Miller:
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: why does the present seem to us to have a particularly salient quality that other moments lack; what are the cognitive apparatuses that underlie our experience of
temporality and how do they function to create temporal phenomenology; what is the evolutionary significance of the phenomenology of temporal flow and to what extent is the phenomenology of temporal flow essential for agency.
— Kristie Miller — Luke
I don't see the problem. There are two directions of time. Neither of these directions of time ever changes. The only thing that might change is which direction of time is pointing towards greater entropy could change. But the direction is not changing. Only what is in that direction might change. — Douglas Alan
The problem that I see here is that there is no inherent connection between the direction of time given by the time coordinate of the relativistic spacetime — SophistiCat
Except that there is actually no motion according to Eternalism. I would imagine that it's much easier to explain why we perceive motion if there actually is motion than if there actually isn't. My point, again, is better expressed by Kristie Miller: — Luke
I don't think you understand how philosophy works. You pointed me at something that putatively needs to be explained, and I provided my putative explanation. It is now your job, should you chose to accept it, to provide your putative explanation for why what I argued is wrong.
Instead of doing this, you just repeat the same thing, as if I have said nothing. — Douglas Alan
The book from which this chapter was selected seems to be a textbook that a Philosophy professor would assign their students to read. Such treatises are often specifically designed leave certain questions unanswered, in order to allow for debate in the classroom and for students to write papers where they have the leeway to chose which position they want to argue for. — Douglas Alan
I will point out that Miller also describes plenty of problems for presentists, and you are cherry-picking your argument from authority by ignoring the fact that Miller has more objections against presentism than she has against eternalism. — Douglas Alan
I consider Miller's article to be an even-handed presentation of the issues, and you might recall that it was introduced in the OP, not by me. Call it "argument from authority" if you like, but I am simply attempting to have it recognised that Eternalism entails a motionless world. — Luke
why do we have such a different relationship with the future than with the past
It's been a long time since I studied special relativity (we spent several weeks on it in Physics 101), but IIRC, relativity doesn't provide a forward and reverse direction of time. It just provides two directions of time, and they are symmetric. — Douglas Alan
The eternalist view has no experiencer. — noAxioms
Is a great novel static? Or is it dynamic and full of exciting and interesting events?
You tell me! — Douglas Alan
why do we have such a different relationship with the future than with the past
One hugely important reason for this is that we can remember the past and not the future. This is true in eternalism just as much as it is true in presentism. It follows plainly from thermodynamics and information theory. — Douglas Alan
This begs the question. Why assume that 'time flows' from ordered to disordered states? Because that accords with our perceptions? It remains unexplained why there should be a preferred directionality to our perceptions of temporal flow if nothing really moves. — Luke
I don't assume that time flows from ordered to disordered states. In fact, since I have stated that eternalism is true, I have stated that time doesn't flow at all. — Douglas Alan
SInce physical law is the same under both eternalism and presentism, our brains are going to be in the same states either way for any given point in time. And because they are going to be in the same states either way, our minds are going to represent things the same way regardless of whether it is eternalism that is true or presentism that is true. — Douglas Alan
You implied that time has a naturally preferred directionality when you stated that we remember the past and not the future, which "follows plainly from thermodynamics and information theory." I don't see how you can consistently argue both that time doesn't flow and that time has a preferred directionality. — Luke
Who says that we "get" from one brain state to the next? At time T1, you are in brain state A. At time T2, you are in brain state B. For any given time Tn, physical law tells us what brain state you will be in. And that brain state will be the same brain state whether eternalism is true or presentism is true.If nothing moves or flows, then how do we get from one brain state to the next? — Luke
Are there any theories of how our brains work (e.g. to produce our minds and represent things) which do not require motion? — Luke
I have not said that time has a "preferred directionality". I have said that you can remember the past and not the future. Which direction is "preferred"? The directions just have different properties due to the laws of thermodynamics. Laws which are not affected in the slightest by eternalism or presentism. — Douglas Alan
Why don't you give it a rest and find something else to argue about? — SophistiCat
Let's just say you implied that time has a direction, or that there is an arrow of time, if you will. How is this consistent with your agreement that "time doesn't flow at all"? No flow should entail no direction. — Luke
You remember right, but that wasn't at issue - we've both acknowledged that this is the case. My point is that relativistic time is not identical to physical time (the time that physical clocks measure). — SophistiCat
Why is this important? To bring this back to the original topic, a common argument for the B-theory and against the A-theory is that the theory of relativity, though it may not rule out the A-theory, does not offer any support for it either. The A-theory requires additional assumptions that are not part of SR or GR. The implicit thesis here is that we ought to base our theory of time on the theory of relativity and nothing else. But this thesis is weakened if the identity between relativistic time and physical time is weakened.
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