unenlightened
The mind looks to the future in anticipation, and the senses look rearward at the past. — Metaphysician Undercover
... if fairy dust were involved. — T Clark
T Clark
How did he know to stretch out his hand just at that moment? — unenlightened
unenlightened
T Clark
It's a question about how fairy dust works.
So that's a 'no'. — unenlightened
unenlightened
Fairy dust is like dark matter. The only evidence that it exists is that all our theories will be wrong unless it does. — T Clark
T Clark
Well the theory that all our theories are wrong, must be wrong, because if it were right then not all our theories would be wrong. Therefore fairy dust necessarily exists. — unenlightened
EugeneW
I'm pretty sure the only way that could happen is if fairy dust were involved — T Clark
T Clark
Normal matter is fairy dust in a universe where all moves opposite. The laws of TD are asymmetrical in time not because fairy dust is involved but because of initial conditions. Why are they not the reversed end conditions? Why not is the end of our universe a begin in reverse? Why not is the end the begin and aren't we heading back to the begin? What's so special about the begin? That its ordered? But why is that special? Does a reversed universe heading for the singularity needs incredible finetuning? So the stone jumps from the floor, together with broken glass and reversed sound, a window gets healed, and the stone is caught by a boy? — EugeneW
Metaphysician Undercover
There is no light coming from the future, only from the past. You say 'looks' but it is not observation but imagination. — unenlightened
Fairy dust is like dark matter. The only evidence that it exists is that all our theories will be wrong unless it does. — T Clark
EugeneW
Fairy dust is like dark matter. The only evidence that it exists is that all our theories will be wrong unless it does.
6h — T Clark
EugeneW
Fairy dust is like dark matter. The only evidence that it exists is that all our theories will be wrong unless it does. — T Clark
How did he know to stretch out his hand just at that moment? — unenlightened
Agent Smith
Nobody took this bait.
I cannot find a difference between B and C. B-theorists define directionality based on entropy levels. If the C-theorist denies this, it seems they are in denial of thermodynamic law.
Most of the literature I saw concerning C-theory mistakenly uses A-references in describing B-theory, which is a straw man.
As for the title of this topic "Why does time move forward?", I can only say that it is a problem only for those that posit that time is something that moves, forward or otherwise — noAxioms
Agent Smith
Agent Smith
Agent Smith
Eurt si B neht A fo trap si B dna eurt si A fi — EugeneW
Agent Smith
EugeneW
EugeneW
What would the reverse of modus ponens look like?
1. If p then q
2. p
Ergo,
3. q — Agent Smith
noAxioms
A, B: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_series_and_B_seriesWhat are A, B, C theories of time? Be as concise as possible. — Agent Smith
Luke
C theory, which rejects temporal directionality. — Kuro
Nobody took this bait.
I cannot find a difference between B and C. B-theorists define directionality based on entropy levels. If the C-theorist denies this, it seems they are in denial of thermodynamic law. — noAxioms
Cuthbert
EugeneW
The question of the thread may appear to be about time but may actually be about meanings. For example: "Why does the top of a revolving wheel always go in the opposite direction to the bottom?" Well, why? — Cuthbert
Cuthbert
Because that's the way a wheel rolls. — EugeneW
But it can roll in two directions. So can time. Why isn't the begin situation of the universe situated at the end? With all motion reversed? — EugeneW
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.