I think so too, and I think I know what you mean. Trouble is, your claims are without proportion. You're as a man who says that you cannot sit in a chair because there is no such thing as a chair - just mostly profoundly empty space and widely spaced teeny wavicles. And of course I'm sitting as I type and likely you as you read. Of course there is a two o'clock, and with all the furniture that implies, and true and meaningful in its context for its purposes. Will that do for applications in which it won't do? Duh, no. But somehow, your "wisdom" that would confound the world, doesn't seem to slow it down even a whit.I think it's pretty obvious what I mean. — Metaphysician Undercover
This claim does not seem to be based in any logic. If it is true that there is nothing which is eternal, this makes the statement "nothing is eternal" true. It does not make the statement "nothing is eternal" eternal. In fact, that would contradict the premise that there is nothing which is eternal. — Metaphysician Undercover
Trouble is, your claims are without proportion. — tim wood
Of course there is a two o'clock, and with all the furniture that implies, and true and meaningful in its context for its purposes. — tim wood
Let’s assume nothing is eternal. — leo
There are two very distinct uses of "eternal". One refers to existing forever, infinite temporal existence. The other refers to existence outside of time. Aristotle demonstrated that the first, infinite temporal existence, is a faulty concept. Following this, Christian theologians accepted the second meaning, "outside of time" as the description of the eternality of God. What exactly is meant by this is a subject for speculation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps there is another way of phrasing this? Perhaps "There is no object in the physical universe that has the property of being eternal"? — EricH
From our point of view we only experience a portion of the present, which is itself an extremely small part of all that it, was and ever will be. — leo
I would say an eternal, infinite consciousness would experience it all at once forever. — leo
If something (God) never changes, then how does it cause change? How does an effect of change follow from a never-changing cause?Define Truth as what is eternal, what never changes.
Is there such a thing?
Assume Truth does not exist. Then there is nothing that never changes. So “there is nothing that never changes” is eternal. So Truth exists.
So something is eternal. Some call it God.
I find it interesting that it can be proven that something eternal exists. — leo
What is a "thing"? Is eternal a thing? If not, then how can predicate statements not be eternal if they both qualify as not-things?Truth is a predicate of statements; it is not a thing. It is not god nor is it eternal. — Banno
This depends on how you define "the present". I would define it as the division between past and future. It seems evident to me that my experience consists of some past and some future, so I would say that my experience encompasses all of the present, and also some past and some future. But if you define "the present" as consisting of an extended period of time, then it is likely that we only experience a part of the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
This appears to me to be an incoherent statement. "Consciousness" and "experience" are specific to the way that we experience time. To talk about a consciousness experiencing all of time at once doesn't really make any sense. Consider what it would be like if what we experienced as a thousandth of a second in time, would consist of the physical changes of a billion years. We don't notice the changes of a thousandth of a second because they go by so fast. So all the things which happen to the earth, the solar system, and the entire universe, in a billion years, would not be noticeable to this consciousness because they go by so fast. Now extend this to all of time. Everything which happens throughout the entirety of time would not be noticeable because it zooms by too fast. How does it make sense to talk about a scenario like this? — Metaphysician Undercover
I would say your experience consists only of some present. Your memories and expectations are experienced in the present, and they don't necessarily reflect accurately what you did experience in the past or what you will experience in the future. — leo
Well what if all moments in time exist concurrently, and we only see a tiny portion of it as we're traveling along? — leo
When you sense something, isn't the thing sensed, in the past by the time that it is sensed? This is how we came to know that light moves faster than sound. You see something in the distance, then the sound of that follows. But still, light takes some time, so the thing seen (experienced) is in the past by the time that it is experienced. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think our experience is really of the past and of the future. Think of anticipation in general. It is a natural instinct to expect the future. How could you anticipate unless you somehow knew there is a future. And how could you know there is a future unless you somehow were experiencing it. — Metaphysician Undercover
This would make sense, but it requires a mechanism which propels one along through time. So when you think about it, it makes a lot more sense to conceive of actual time passing in an active world, then to conceive of a mechanism propelling human beings through a static world. Consider all the scientific evidence which indicates that time was passing and things were changing prior to the existence of human beings. How does it make sense to think that the physical world was arranged in such a way so as to make it appear to us like time was passing and things were changing before human existence, but things were really static without some conscious being, actively being propelled through this simulation? And now, if you accept that this is a simulation, and change was not really occurring, you need to explain this mechanism which is exclusive to the human being, and propels the human being through this fixed world. — Metaphysician Undercover
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