about five to twenty minutes has elapsed — jgill
what's happening right now in a galaxy far, far way in your reference frame isn't what's happening right now in a galaxy far, far away in my reference frame. — Michael
about five to twenty minutes has elapsed — jgill
I'm glad you're not on my appointment list. — Metaphysician Undercover
Is that just because we don't know what is happening, or is it because there's nothing happening? A realist would presumably say that something is happening right now in a galaxy far, far way, but if special relativity is true then what's happening right now depends on our individual, relative velocities, such that what's happening right now in a galaxy far, far way in your reference frame isn't what's happening right now in a galaxy far, far away in my reference frame. — Michael
Sorry. I think the difference you describe is meaningless. — T Clark
Do you feel comfortable saying both are correct because neither has a privileged frame of reference? If yes, what makes the Andromeda example different for you? If not, why not? — Benkei
You think the distinction between "there is intelligent life in the Andromeda Galaxy" being truth-apt and it not being truth-apt is a meaningless distinction? — Michael
While Bill stays put, Ann moves toward the light coming towards her showing the events as they unfold. Of course she's going to see the decision to invade Earth before Bill does. By the time the light reaches her, she's simply closer to it. She's been walking millions of years towards it already. Once Bill sees the decision happening, for Ann at that point, having walked at 5 m/s for all that time, the light reaching her then is 15 days later and the armada is already on its way. — Benkei
I also don't see how it applies in this context. — T Clark
The "common sense" realist view is that if it's true then it's true for all of us, otherwise it's false for all of us, but if special relativity is correct then whether or not it's true can be relative to our individual movements. — Michael
But the relativity of simultaneity isn't just about one person seeing something before another person; it's about that thing actually happening for one person before another person. That's what I find peculiar. — Michael
You think it's peculiar that in a setup where event A follows B, where one person moves towards those events, that person will see A before the other person — Benkei
No. This has nothing to do with what one person sees. There are distant events happening in my present that I cannot see because they are too far away. According to special relativity some of these events happen in your future even though they are happening in my present. This is what I find peculiar. — Michael
However, getting back to the description of four-dimensionalism, there are things that throw me off or, at best, make me wonder:
1) "An object's persistence through time is like its extension through space". — Alkis Piskas
What the Andromeda Paradox implies is that the observed universe apparently shifts in its entirety towards a moving observer. Which means that in the forward moving direction many more of the most distant galaxies come into possible view and we lose some distant galaxies from possible view behind us. This is all pretty absurd, yet it is demonstrably true. — magritte
I have not tackled the Andromeda Paradox yet. In the articles it is said to be an extension by Penrose of "a form of" the Rietdijk–Putnam argument. I only talked about the Rietdijk–Putnam argument itself and how it didn't make much sense to me.What the Andromeda Paradox implies is that the observed universe apparently shifts in its entirety towards a moving observer. — magritte
I see that you introduce more factors than what is described by Penrose. But this can be done also in my own example as I mentioned above. However, the main factor --as I see it-- involved here, the "protagonist", is "uncertainly". Any additions only increase --they might also decrease-- that uncertainty.Which means that in the forward moving direction many more of the most distant galaxies come into possible view and we lose some distant galaxies from possible view behind us. This is all pretty absurd, yet it is demonstrably true. — magritte
You see a factor here the importance or even the meaning of which --in the present context-- most probably escapes me: the direction of motion.Then this becomes equivalent to an observer shifting its 'present' physically measurably in space toward the direction of motion. The effect is that we can see from some future present some event that can then be prevented from causing harm in the present present after we quickly got back to where we belong. — magritte
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