Is time an aspect of an object, even? — Moliere
I do not understand time at all, — Moliere
This came to me again today while I was listening to a Cure cover of a Jimi Hendrix song. It took me back to my childhood when the door to the future seemed like the gate on oblivion. There was a lot of pessimism about there being any future for the human race.
I like their Stone Free cover.
The concept of the object is a the construction that takes place in time,
until its got the rhythm "to ride the breeze" of your imagination,
Stone free, yeah, to do what I[you] please
Similar to a music you can anticipate future beat. — Cavacava
Leibniz and Kant may not be much help then as they were still operating in a Newtonian reference frame in which the best that could be imagined was Galilean relativity. — apokrisis
Same argument to address time: If time is absolute (and so something objects pass through and present in a void), then God would be able to turn the universal clock back by 4 hours. We can see that even in principle, no time change would be detectable, so blah blah blah.. no change in time took place. Time can't be absolute. — Mongrel
Thus in Leibniz-style thought experiments, worlds that at first sight [appear] physically different, turn out to be mathematically identical, [but] in the [Einstein] hole argument, apparently mathematically different worlds reveal themselves as physically identical.
http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/9676/1/Giovanelli_-_Leibniz_Equivalence.pdf
I don't see how this argument makes sense. If time were absolute then God could turn back the time by 4 hours. But no time change would be detectable to us. So how do we know that God didn't turn the clock back 4 hours, and a change in time which was undetectable to us didn't take place? — Metaphysician Undercover
God can "turn the clock back," destroy the present states and reorder the world in a way similar to what was four hours ago. — TheWillowOfDarkness
So you thought I was conflating Leibniz and Einstein. OK. That wasn't my intention.What I was originally pointing out to you was the big difference between reacting to Newtonian vs modern understandings of space/time. — apokrisis
You're thinking that when God turns the universal clock back, that NOW is moved backward. The universe isn't a point in time. It's all of time. So God is moving all of time back four hours. See? You've got to stop thinking of time as a river that things flow through. That is Newtonian time.There are actual consequences that a thermometer would reveal. — apokrisis
Scientifically speaking, time is that which a chronometer measures. — Moliere
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