And then it's clear that there are an infinite number of years that have passed already to the present day.
— god must be atheist
...since when? — Amalac
Time elapses “since” some moment in time (not necessarily a beginning in time) “to” some other moment in time.
If not, then I don't understand what you mean by “passed”. — Amalac
Something that happened since “never” is something that in fact didn't happen. — Amalac
“5 years have elapsed since 2016 to today” has a clear meaning for me — Amalac
I did not say "It happened since never." — god must be atheist
I answered your question. — god must be atheist
So if you say an infinite amount of time has passed up to the present day, then you must also say that it passed since some point in the timeline, otherwise I've no idea what you mean when you say an infinite amount of time “passed” — Amalac
"an infinite number of years have passed in a series of infinite number of points in time, each point being between two consecutive years." — god must be atheist
If you need to know how I defined "passed", which is a commonly used English term or word — god must be atheist
Elapsed time is simply the amount of time that passes from the beginning of an event to its end.
(...) In simplest terms, elapsed time is how much time goes by from one time (say 3:35pm) to another (6:20pm).
I actually said, if you would kindly check, that an infinite number of years passed, not an infinite amount of time. — god must be atheist
"A year passed after a point in time that marked the end of the previous year, in an infinite series." — god must be atheist
But I can't say: infinitely many years have elapsed since ??? happened to today. — Amalac
In simplest terms, elapsed time is how much time goes by from one time (say 3:35pm) to another (6:20pm).
Isn't an infinite number of years an infinite amount of time? I don't see how that distinction is important. — Amalac
If you go back, I did point it out to you that this is the wrong question. Much like asking "how manieth infinitely small point is the end point in a straight line segment consisting of an infinite number of infinitely small points?"So if I asked you “since when have infinitely many years passed?”, I expect you to answer “since year X”.
So what's the value of X? — Amalac
cannot find the reference — Cuthbert
Spatial differentiation is perceivable/sensible, yes? (hm not sure "sensible" is the right word here) — jorndoe
Witnessing indicates observation. To witness an object from outside its limits merely indicates observing the object’s spatial boundaries.
— Mww
What is the boundary of the world then? I guess you mean something like the CMB? — Amalac
Assuming the absolute validity of the principle, the only reconciliation is simultaneity, in which time is no longer presupposed, yet for which account is given.
— Mww
So by simultaneously you don't mean “at the same time”, what do you mean by that then? Logically simultaneous? — Amalac
If there's no present, and an infinite amount of time has elapsed as Kant maintains in the first thesis, since when to when did it elapse? — Amalac
I wish to know how the two concepts in Kant's definition are described: infinite and infinity. — god must be atheist
If the infinite is an adjective as you say,
— Mww
you are using it as a noun. You used it as a noun when you quoted Kant.
Are you referencing this: “Now, just as the unit which is taken is greater or smaller, the infinite will be greater or smaller”?
Ehhhh....that just means regardless of how many minutes there are in an infinite time, there will be more of them than an infinite time composed of hours.
Easy peasey — god must be atheist
but infinity continued to be associated with endless processes — Wikipedia
The past, however, is treated as something complete - done with so to speak - and thus, any talk of the past being an infinity immediately sets off alarm bells inside our heads. — TheMadFool
I diverge from Kant here, and adjoin Schopenhauer, re: the world as “will and representation”, in that I consider the world to be the immediate unity of phenomena, that which directly appears to my representational faculties, a much narrower view of experience proper. All else, being possible experience doesn’t change the my idea of world, but rather, enlarges its content and thereby its limits. As such, the boundary of my world is the totality of my possible experience, and, because of that restriction, the CMB is irrelevant. — Mww
I think more the simultaneity of the initiation of phenomena, with the possibility of the representation of them, by an eventual intellect equipped with a cognitive system predicated on it. Within such a system, time is not an object so doesn’t depend on the ontology of objects, but it is used by the system in referencing objects to the system or to each other, so as soon as objects become possible, so too does the possibility of referencing them. Time is therefore irrelevant if there are no objects and if there is no system. — Mww
Again, he doesn’t maintain it, he supposes it in order to have something to debunk. — Mww
There may be an infinite time regressively from the beginning of the world, but not from an infinite time progressively to the beginning of the world. — Mww
If you read the antinomies, you should have found he did the same thing in the antithesis. In the thesis he supposed the world had no beginning then proved it did, in the antithesis he supposed the world had a beginning and proved it didn’t. They are called conflicts of transcendental ideas for just that reason; either can be proved in its own way. — Mww
Well that's what I meant, it seems I expressed myself poorly (english is not my mother tongue). — Amalac
But how, then, do you define “the past”, if not as the time previous to the present moment? — Amalac
I'm doubting the truth of that hypothetical proposition. — Amalac
I'm not saying Kant maintained that the universe had an infinite past, I'm doubting the truth of that hypothetical proposition. — Amalac
what I said was that he maintained that if the past were infinite then that implies that an infinite amount of time has elapsed. — Amalac
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