How is the distance traveled by light in 1/299 792 458 of a second not the distance between two points?
— Luke
The "distance traveled by light in 1/299 792 458 of a second" is a metre, and "the distance between two points" could be any distance. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm beginning to see that you and I have completely different ideas as to what constitutes a "conscious judgement". — Metaphysician Undercover
So if time did have a start, then the perspective which places the future as before the past is the true perspective because there was necessarily a future before there was any past. — Metaphysician Undercover
Those examples, time slowing down, and time speeding up, are really more evidence that we do not experience time. If we do not pay attention to the clock we quickly lose track of how much time has passed. Then when we try to make the judgement as to how much time has passed, simply by referring to what we remember as having happened, we are very wrong. Gotta go---where has all the time gone? — Metaphysician Undercover
I asked how a metre is not the distance between two points.
I did not ask how the distance between two points is not a metre.
Obviously the distance between two points “could be any distance” (including a metre).
That does not explain how a metre is not the distance between two points. — Luke
Thanks for the reply. Yes, what you term "conscious judgement" I would term "conscious discernment". To me a discernment can be automatic from the pov of consciousness whereas a judgment is an act of judging, which in turn is the process of forming an opinion, which takes time to come to a conclusion. But there is no fixed set of rules for use of linguistic expressions in cases such as this. Yes, I think more intelligent lesser animals can make conscious judgments as I've just described the term, and, more so, that all animals can make discernments. A favorite example of mine: ameba (which are far simpler than animals) can discern predators from prey - but in my lexicon I wouldn't say that ameba can make judgments about what is predator and what is prey. — javra
A favorite example of mine: ameba (which are far simpler than animals) can discern predators from prey - but in my lexicon I wouldn't say that ameba can make judgments about what is predator and what is prey. — javra
That said, I continue to maintain the mainstream view that the physical future can only occur after the physical past. — javra
I asked how a metre is not the distance between two points.
— Luke
No, actually you asked "how is the distance traveled by light in 1/299 792 458 of a second not the distance between two points". — Metaphysician Undercover
The "distance traveled by light in 1/299 792 458 of a second" is a metre, — Metaphysician Undercover
I gave the definition of a "metre", and it does not mention "the distance between two points", or anything about points. And, in no way is "the distance between two points" implied by that definition I gave. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, it may not be possible to class my examples of holding up a number of fingers, and an object and asking what colour it is, as automatic, or habitual. — Metaphysician Undercover
Obviously we need more distinctions then simply conscious judgements and non-conscious discernments, because we have to account for all sorts of different habits, both innate and learned. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think you would agree that there is a big difference between the response to a flash card, and the response to the tap on your knee when the doctor tests your reflexes. And as well, a big difference again between the reflex of your knee, and the behaviour of the ameba.
I believe that the difference lies in the mode of anticipation. I think that the different systems of living beings have built into them different anticipatory mechanisms. — Metaphysician Undercover
That said, I continue to maintain the mainstream view that the physical future can only occur after the physical past. — javra
I think you ought to consider that there is no such thing as "the physical future". — Metaphysician Undercover
“Traveled” implies having gone from point A to point B. — Luke
Same with discerning yellow from red. It's automatic. — javra
So I can't place the total organism of an ameba as having less complex anticipatory mechanisms that the knee jerk you refer to. — javra
I don't assume the block cosmos of eternalism. I so far give my ontological beliefs the label of presentism, for lack of a better term. But the details are complex (e.g., laconically, and for all intended purposes, the past is yet static due to causal reasons that are conjoined into the realities of the present - and it is remembered as having been physical, hence "the physical past"), and, besides, I did say I'd drop the subject of time. — javra
That said, although we'd both agree that there currently is no physical future, would we nevertheless agree that there will be a future physical present as a consequence of what occurs in the present? If so, as shorthand, I termed this future physical present the physical future. — javra
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