I am always in the present, even if my mind is elsewhere. — Art48
hen if God is real, our only point of contact where we could possibly meet is the present. — Art48
Here's something to think about. Try to pinpoint the present, the exact point in time, which divides the future from past. Every time you say "now', by the time you say "now" it is in the past. — Metaphysician Undercover
A bullet at any instant is at some point in space but my perception limits me to perceiving it in some region of space in that I cannot tell exactly where it is. Ontologically, the now may be a point in time even if I perceive it as a small region of time. — Art48
Ontologically, the now may be a point in time even if I perceive it as a small region of time. — Art48
And in that model nothing is synchronized enough to be called 'the present'. If you see a bird flying in the sky near the sun, the light that bounced off the bird hit it a fraction of a second ago, but the rays coming for the Sun left it eight minutes ago. That is, what you perceive as contemporary is not – the Sun might have suddenly ceased to exist four minutes ago, long before that bird even got near you. Your perception 'the bird flies when the sun shines' would be false in that case. — Jabberwock
Every time you say "now', by the time you say "now" it is in the past. So the present cannot be a point in time which separates past from future, because that point will always be in the past. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I explained, the idea of "an instant", as a point in time, is not really consistent with reality as we know it. It's a useful ideal, but not at all real. — Metaphysician Undercover
It could be argued that the present time is that time while or during your saying of the word "now", and that (at that time) the past precedes this act and the future procedes it. — Luke
Then the same could be said of any period of time - not just an instant - and so all periods of time are "useful ideals" that are not "consistent with reality". — Luke
we must not use language as it is "not really consistent with reality". — Luke
Yes, and that\s what comes later in the post. If activity occurs at the present, then the present must consist of duration, not a point. — Metaphysician Undercover
Any proposed period of time is actually indefinite, having an imprecise beginning and ending because of this issue. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I explained, the idea of "an instant", as a point in time, is not really consistent with reality as we know it. It's a useful ideal, but not at all real.
— Metaphysician Undercover
...we must not use language as it is "not really consistent with reality".
— Luke
This does not follow though. As I said, it's a useful ideal. Usefulness is not dependent on accuracy, precision, or even truth in the sense of correspondence. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you mean a period of time, such as a minute or an hour, then I disagree that these are indefinite periods of time. If you mean any measurement of time, then I suppose there might be at least some imprecision involved with any measurement, but I don't see why it matters. — Luke
But if "an instant" is "not really consistent with reality" as a point in time, then "a minute" is "not really consistent with reality" as a period of time. — Luke
If you mean a period of time, such as a minute or an hour, then I disagree that these are indefinite periods of time. If you mean any measurement of time, then I suppose there might be at least some imprecision involved with any measurement, but I don't see why it matters.
— Luke
I didn't say that "it matters", only pointing out the reality and truth of it. It might matter to you, or it might not, depending on your interest. But it seems to me like you are trying to make an argument where none is called for. — Metaphysician Undercover
But if "an instant" is "not really consistent with reality" as a point in time, then "a minute" is "not really consistent with reality" as a period of time.
— Luke
Right, and as I said above, this might matter to you or it might not, depending on your interest. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are you saying that (e.g.) a minute is an indefinite period of time? Isn't it exactly 60 seconds?
Or are you saying that any measurement of time is indefinite? — Luke
My interest is that I didn't find your argument - that the present moment cannot be an instantaneous point in time - to be very convincing. — Luke
You could make an argument such that if we imagine an instant of time to be like a photograph, and if we consider that the average shutter speed of a typical photograph is 1/60th of a second, then it follows that an actual instant of time requires some duration, no matter how small. — Luke
As (I think) you note, an instantaneous point in time, like a point in space, is a dimensionless concept. However, in reality, if we assume the present to be the time at which we each find ourselves conscious, then a dimensionless point in time with zero duration would seem to be an insufficient "time window" in which to be conscious. A point in time with zero duration is no time at all, and there is nothing to be conscious of in no time at all. Or something like that. — Luke
Both, defining one period of time with another doesn't clarify anything because it would lead to an infinite regress, without ever giving any indication as to how to actually apply those measurement principles in practise. And, in practise any measurement is imprecise due to the problem with the start and end point. — Metaphysician Undercover
Any proposed period of time is actually indefinite, having an imprecise beginning and ending because of this issue. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you are interested in my argument, then address the argument itself, rather than some other vague ideas about measurement problems, which seem to be irrelevant to my argument anyway. — Metaphysician Undercover
You could make an argument such that if we imagine an instant of time to be like a photograph, and if we consider that the average shutter speed of a typical photograph is 1/60th of a second, then it follows that an actual instant of time requires some duration, no matter how small.
— Luke
That's a better question, more directed at the argument itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
Whether the "instant" is defined as the time between the points, or defined as the points — Metaphysician Undercover
The second part of the argument is that any duration of time consists of a part which is before and a part which is after. In relation to the present, the prior part is past and the posterior part is future, therefore the present must consist of both future and past. — Metaphysician Undercover
It was this claim about any proposed period of time being "indefinite" and "imprecise" that I was querying and criticising. As you confirm above, this relates only to measurement. There is nothing indefinite or imprecise about a stipulated measure of time, such as a minute. Your introduction of how to "actually apply measurement principles in practise" are not relevant to your statement that "any proposed period of time is indefinite [and] imprecise". A minute is exactly 60 seconds long - no more, no less. — Luke
This makes little sense to me. The present is neither past nor future. I see no reason to accept why it must "consist" of either past or future. — Luke
I thought it was quite clear that I was talking about the thing measured, the passage of time, hence my statement "time is known as what is passing, and what always has some duration". — Metaphysician Undercover
If you would like to address the argument... — Metaphysician Undercover
if the present consists of a duration of time, then some of that duration must be before, the other part which is after. — Metaphysician Undercover
So if the present separates future from past, and it consists of a duration of time, then part of the present must be in the future, and part of it in the past. — Metaphysician Undercover
Before and after what? — Luke
I don't see how the conclusion follows, — Luke
Before and after each other. — Metaphysician Undercover
So if the present separates future from past, and it consists of a duration of time, then part of the present must be in the future, and part of it in the past. — Metaphysician Undercover
Good. Im glad you did not mean before and after the present. Now all that’s left to explain is how your conclusion follows: — Luke
Why must part of the present be in the future and part of it in the past? — Luke
In relation to the present, the before is called "past", and the after is called "future". Therefore when we talk about this period of time which we call "the present", part is in the past and part is in the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps a couple examples will help you to understand. This year, 2023, is the present. Part is in the past, part in the future. Today, July 2, is the present. Part is in the past, part is in the future. This minute is the present. Part is in the past, part in the future. Etc.. — Metaphysician Undercover
The second sentence does not follow from the first. What is before the present is called "past" and what is after the present is called "future". Therefore, neither the past nor the future are part of the present. — Luke
The present is a duration with start and end points. — Luke
If 2023 is the present, then the past is everything before 2023 and the future is everything after 2023.
If July 2 is the present, then the past is everything before July 2 and the future is everything after July 2.
If this minute is the present, then the past is everything before this minute and the future is everything after this minute. — Luke
There is no part of the past or the future in the present. — Luke
"Present" is not defined that way in my argument. It is defined by our conscious experience. — Metaphysician Undercover
your objection is based in equivocation, and is irrelevant. — Metaphysician Undercover
Start and end points are what is demonstrated by the first part of the argument as incorrect, unreal, false. — Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, it is this definition of "present", which requires a non-dimensional divisor between different parts of time, and this is dealt with in the first part of the argument. — Metaphysician Undercover
Part of 2023 is in the past and part is in the future, despite the fact that 2023 is the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is defined by our conscious experience and it is the year 2023, or July 2, or whatever. — Luke
How can there be a duration without start and end points? If there is a duration of some length, then that length must have end points. — Luke
How can the present both be defined by our conscious experience and also be 2023? Is a part of your present conscious experience in the past and part in the future? How can your present conscious experience be in the future or the past? Wouldn't they just be your past and future conscious experiences? Unless you wish to argue that you consciously experience 2023 all at once? — Luke
This is because you will not allow "present" to be defined by conscious experience. — Metaphysician Undercover
They do not determine the present from past and future, like you say. — Metaphysician Undercover
We went through this already, the duration is indefinite. it is not "a duration of some length", simply duration. It is you tendency to fall back on measurement which makes you insist on points. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sorry for the misleading examples, let's just go back to the argument itself, if you will. I suggest that if you want to understand, release your preconceived notion of "the present", and start with an open mind. Are you will to start with your conscious experience of being at the present, experiencing the passing of time, without reference to measurement? — Metaphysician Undercover
Is a part of your present conscious experience in the past and part in the future? How can your present conscious experience be in the future or the past? Wouldn't they just be your past and future conscious experiences? — Luke
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