Pierre-Normand
Yes. Do you see a problem? — Mongrel
tom
That would seem to be the same problem afflicting the idea of displacing the whole of space. You can shift a house 100 feet to the North. Can you move the whole of space in the same direction? What would such a hypothetical displacement be relative to? — Pierre-Normand
Metaphysician Undercover
It's not "undetectable to us." It's undetectable even in principle. Then apply Leibniz's Law. — Mongrel
Mongrel
That would seem to be the same problem afflicting the idea of displacing the whole of space. You can shift a house 100 feet to the North. Can you move the whole of space in the same direction? What would the displacement that would have hypothetically occurred be relative to? — Pierre-Normand
Mongrel
Pierre-Normand
Trying to adapt the thought experiment to address time is a little confusing to me. — Mongrel
tom
Can't you ask essentially the same question about time? Anything that occurs (e.g. the construction of a house) could have occurred four years earlier (or later). But could everything that is occurring (and occurred, and will occur) in the whole universe occur four years earlier? Relative to what event would everything have occurred four years earlier? — Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand
The entropy of the visible universe for example. — tom
Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think God would be able to detect the change either. Think about the question Pierre asked: what is the change relative to? — Mongrel
Mongrel
Can't you ask essentially the same question about time? Anything that occurs (e.g. the construction of a house) could have occurred four years earlier (or later). But could everything that is occurring (and occurred, and will occur) in the whole universe occur four years earlier? Relative to what event would everything have occurred four years earlier? — Pierre-Normand
Mongrel
this immaterial existence must have some other means of gauging time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Pierre-Normand
The possibility that time and space are limitless is confusing me. But is that a problem? Can the thought experiment just say that for every E, E happens 4 hours earlier? And not address whether time is finite or infinite? — Mongrel
Metaphysician Undercover
It's a reductio ad absurdum argument. God's decision to move the universe is not a premise, it's the object of analysis. Does it make sense for God to move the universe? — Mongrel
tom
Well, I was assuming all the micro-physical "events" to be shifted as well, not just the macroscopic ones. Since the entropy of a physical system supervenes on its micro-physical state, then the entropy of all the systems (including local cosmic background radiation) would be shifted back in time by the same amount. — Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand
You asked what time could be reversed relative to. — tom
tom
Maybe someone else, not me. I didn't touch on the issue of the arrow of time. I was only considering the intelligibility of the idea of shifting the temporal scale (or all events) four hours in the past (or in the future), in analogy with the idea of a uniform translation of space itself. — Pierre-Normand
Metaphysician Undercover
Mongrel
Mongrel
Pierre-Normand
Did we agree or disagree that Leibniz's argument for relative space works for relative time? — Mongrel
Mongrel
Pierre-Normand
Cool. So there could be no passage of time in a void. Picking a point in time is actually picking an event. The assignment of a temporal point says something about how our event is related to other events. Is that about all we can glean from Leibniz? — Mongrel
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