I do not exist in the past or the future. I exist now, in the present. If God is real, I can only experience God in the present. Excessive thought and concern about past and future takes me away from where I really am, takes me out of reality, takes me away from God. — Art48
I've already provided you with several rebuttals to your argument. You are welcome to address them. You could start with this: — Luke
s a part of your present conscious experience in the past and part in the future? — Luke
How can your present conscious experience be in the future or the past? — Luke
Wouldn't they just be your past and future conscious experiences? — Luke
I know from the way you treated my examples (the present is 2023) that this idea is what you object to. You say that if the event (2023 for example) is "the present" then all of it is at the present, and anything before the entirety of it is past, and anything after the entirety of it is future. This would leave the entirety of that event (2023 in the example) as "the present" with no part inf the future or past. — Metaphysician Undercover
In reality, if there is an event which occurs at the present, then by the fact that it is an "event" it is logically necessary that it has temporal duration and time passes during the occurrence of that event (2023). — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore within the event itself, there are before parts and after parts. — Metaphysician Undercover
And it also follows that during the event, the present event (2023), while that event is occurring and time is passing during its occurrence, some of it in the past and some of it in the future. Therefore within the occurrence of the event which is "at the present" (2023 in the example) we can only understand its temporal progression by assuming that part is past and part is future. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we insist that all the event (2023) is present, and there is no past or future… — Metaphysician Undercover
…[then] there is no grounds for apprehending any temporal progression within the occurrence of the event. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore we can conclude with a very high degree of certainty, because the premises are very strong, that within the event which we call "present conscious experience", some parts are in the past and some are in the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
Conscious experience occurs in the present. That is the principle premise. Conscious experience in the past, and in the future, contradict this premise. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you define "the present" as the entirety of 2023, then the duration of the present is - the present lasts for - the entirety of 2023, by definition. — Luke
That time passes is presupposed regardless of your argument that the present contains parts of the future and past or not. Your stipulation that the present contains parts of the future and past does not make time pass, logically or otherwise. — Luke
Within both the past and future, there are "before" parts and "after" parts. Does it follow from this that the future is in the past and that the past is in the future? — Luke
By definition, it is the duration of the present, not the duration of the past nor the duration of the future. — Luke
We seem to agree that the present moment is defined by your conscious experience, and it is the duration of your conscious experience that defines the duration of the present moment, and only the present moment. — Luke
Why not? There were many years before 2023 and will be many afterwards. — Luke
Which premises? — Luke
How do they contradict the principle premise? They would need to state that conscious experience occurs in the past and in the future in order to contradict it. To avoid contradiction, we could simply state that conscious experience occurred in the past and will occur in the future. — Luke
That is an example, "the present is 2023". — Metaphysician Undercover
It is not a definition of "the present". — Metaphysician Undercover
This year, 2023, is the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
You say that you agree with me that the present is defined by conscious experience, but then you want to define "the present" as either a point in time, or an interval of time with beginning and ending points. Points in time are not at all consistent with our experience of time as continuous. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why not? There were many years before 2023 and will be many afterwards.
— Luke
Because there is no occurrence of any event if there is no passing of time. And passing of time only occurs at the present, as our experience indicates. — Metaphysician Undercover
How can you assert that you've rebutted my argument when you cannot even state the premises? 1 conscious experience indicates that the present is not a point, it consists of duration. 2. A duration consists of parts which are before and parts which are after. 3. Before and after in relation to the present are past and future. — Metaphysician Undercover
How do they contradict the principle premise? They would need to state that conscious experience occurs in the past and in the future in order to contradict it. To avoid contradiction, we could simply state that conscious experience occurred in the past and will occur in the future.
— Luke
Then you are not talking about the present any more, which would be inconsistent with the premise. — Metaphysician Undercover
To avoid contradiction we'd have to say that conscious experience occurred when that time which is now past, was present, to ensure that conscious experience is always at the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
Points in time are consistent with a duration. A duration is a determinate period of time with beginning and end points. It is your premise that the present consists of a duration. — Luke
Thanks for clarifying. However, there seems to be some hidden premises because I fail to see how you reach the conclusion that "time passes" from these premises alone. — Luke
Also, if we take a closer look, premise 1 states that the present consists of a duration and premise 2 states that a duration consists of before and after parts. This implies that the present consists of before and after parts. This does not imply that those before and after parts are past and future parts, because it is the present which consists of those before and after parts. — Luke
We could add that, relative to the present moment, the past comes before the present moment and the future comes after the present moment, but we are not committed to any conclusion that the before parts of the present are past nor that the after parts of the present are future. The before and after parts are only what the present consists of. — Luke
You are still using two different senses of the present moment. — Luke
However, on the other hand, you also treat the present as some mid-point within the duration, which has some parts before it and some parts after, and you treat these as being past and future. — Luke
You should instead treat what is outside the duration of the present as being past and future, rather than what is inside it on either side of the duration of the present's mid-point. — Luke
Points in time are not consistent with our conscious experience of duration. As I said, the duration of the present is indefinite. I said the present consist of "duration", not "a duration", and if I sometimes mentioned "a duration", I meant an indefinite duration. — Metaphysician Undercover
Also, if we take a closer look, premise 1 states that the present consists of a duration and premise 2 states that a duration consists of before and after parts. This implies that the present consists of before and after parts. This does not imply that those before and after parts are past and future parts, because it is the present which consists of those before and after parts.
— Luke
I don't see how the matter described is relevant. It's an issue of defining the terms. "Before and after" in relation to "the present" are known as past and future. If you like, we could adhere to "the present consists of before and after parts", and discuss what this means. But what it means is that the present consists of future and past parts, because if it consisted of only past, or only future parts, this would not be consistent with the conscious experience. — Metaphysician Undercover
...you exclude "past" and "future" from the naming of the parts of "the present", because they have already been used as names relative to the "present moment". — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you think it would make sense to distinguish between the nature of our subjective experiences of 'the present' and the nature of time in the larger reality we are a part of? — wonderer1
It seems to me that you and Luke are both right in ways, but this discussion seems a muddled mess due to not making such a distinction. — wonderer1
It is relevant because you are misusing the terms "past" and "future" — Luke
Your use of two different senses for each of these terms indicates your use of two different senses of "the present". — Luke
This supposed "misuse" is a product of your incoherent definition of "present", as I've already shown to you. You have an incoherent definition of "present" which puts past and future outside of the present, and this renders all aspects of time as unintelligible. By the terms of this incoherent definition, I misuse "past" and "future". — Metaphysician Undercover
...present is logically prior to past and future, and human beings determine past and future relative to their existence at the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
Most people use the following terms to refer to three distinct periods of time: — Luke
If 1 and 3 above are determined relative to 2, then 4 and 5 are determined relative to what? That is, 4 and 5 are in the past and in the future of what? — Luke
The answer can only be a second present - Present (B) - that is nested within Present (A). — Luke
Most people use the following terms to refer to three distinct periods of time:
— Luke
Yes, and I've discussed the problems with this way that most people think. "Distinct periods of time" requires points, dimensionless boundaries to separate them. These points are inconsistent with our experience. — Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, if we assume that there are dimensionless points, boundaries, within time, then these points cannot themselves consist of time, but must be composed of something other than time. Then we have something other than time within time, and this produces the incoherency. — Metaphysician Undercover
We've been through this a number of times, 1 and 3 are simply rejected as incoherent, false ideas of what past and future are. There are no points or dimensionless boundaries separating distinct parts of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then after these are dismissed, we adopt 4 and 5 as a more realistic representation of past and future, a representation which is consistent with our empirical knowledge. — Metaphysician Undercover
We might then proceed toward understanding a "past and future" which is outside the realm of experience and empirical knowledge, and this would be a "past and future" which is outside of the present, like your 1 and 3, with the difference being that they are not based on distinct boundaries. Then we have a way to properly understand past and future as they are, outside the realm of the present , and this understanding will be consistent with our experience, and therefore our empirical knowledge, as not based in distinct boundaries. — Metaphysician Undercover
The point is that Present (A) is incompatible with conscious experience, and incompatible with present (B) which is compatible with conscious experience. Therefore there can be no nesting, and present (A) must be rejected as a misleading idea. — Metaphysician Undercover
1 conscious experience indicates that the present is not a point, it consists of duration. 2. A duration consists of parts which are before and parts which are after. 3. Before and after in relation to the present are past and future. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you think it would make sense to distinguish between the nature of our subjective experiences of 'the present' and the nature of time in the larger reality we are a part of?
— wonderer1
I don't think that this would be possible at this point. The only thing we have to go on is our subjective experiences. So I think it's necessary to get a good understanding of our subjective experiences of time before we can proceed toward speculating about the nature of time in a larger reality. This is because our subjective experiences of time have a very significant impact on our speculations concerning any larger reality... — Metaphysician Undercover
ou don't acknowledge any duration called "the present" that is distinct from past and future times? — Luke
Well, we have different subjective experiences, and based on my subjective experiences it is not only possible, but extremely valuable to recognize difference in our subjective experiences of a present, and happenings in time in the world. — wonderer1
Another factor in my subjective experience is looking at signals captured by oscilloscopes that represent things at time resolutions down to around a nanosecond. I have very good reasons for thinking events really are happening on extremely small time scales regardless of the fact that my unaided perceptions don't reveal things on such small time scales. — wonderer1
Might it be the case that there is a relevant lack of diversity to the sort of subjective experiences you have had? — wonderer1
Since there are no points in time the past and future cannot be distinct from the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, this is another good point. Since we all have somewhat different subjective experiences of "the present", this is a very good reason why there cannot be an objective, and to use Luke's word, "distinct", separation between present, past, and future. There are no objective points of distinction within time, those distinctions are subjective and somewhat arbitrary — Metaphysician Undercover
But if the present consists of a duration of time, then some of that duration must be before, the other part which is after. 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
If there is no distinction between "past", "present" and "future", then what does each word mean? — Luke
I'm curious about your theory, as to how it is we are communicating with each other. However, I can tell you, that you can't understand much about the answer without a more accurate theory of time than you currently have. I suspect you haven't subjected your theory of time to the many falsifying tests which could be done. Thus you haven't seen the need for a more accurate paradigm. — wonderer1
You are correct that we can't think thoughts without a period of time elapsing but look at the inability to clearly distinguish between past and future that comes with your perspective. Do you think it is your thought processes which determine what is past and what is future? — wonderer1
Since there are no points in time the past and future cannot be distinct from the present.
— Metaphysician Undercover
If there is no distinction between "past", "present" and "future", then what does each word mean?
— Luke
You have an unbelievable way of associating meaning with words Luke. That is why it is very difficult to hold a discussion with you. — Metaphysician Undercover
Obviously what I mean by "distinct" is not the same as what you mean by "distinction" here. — Metaphysician Undercover
So your criticism of my argument has just turned into an exercise in equivocation. — Metaphysician Undercover
My use of "past" and "future" (A) is inconsistent with, and cannot support yours (B)... — Metaphysician Undercover
What you apparently fail to understand is that my use is designed to be incompatible with yours — Metaphysician Undercover
...because of the problems I associate with yours. — Metaphysician Undercover
The principal problem is that you require points in time to distinguish your three aspects, and these points are not real, but arbitrary. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you make a distinction between these, then what is it? — Luke
As a reminder, (A) represents past and future times that are external to the present time (A), whereas (B) represents past and future times that are internal to the present time (A); of which the present time (A) consists. Except you later reclaimed (A) times but with imprecise boundaries. However, I note that I never mentioned anything about sharp or imprecise boundaries with regard to (A) times (in the post where I first referred to (A) and (B) times). — Luke
You designed it that way? — Luke
Once again: If the present time (A) consists of both past (B) and future (B) times, then what are those past (B) and future (B) times relative to? They are in the past and in the future of what? — Luke
I've been through this so many times, I don't know why I continue. The distinction is a judgement of before and after in relation to, or if you prefer, from the perspective of, the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
You referred to |"three distinct periods of time", and that's what I objected to. And I told you why, because to be distinct periods of time requires boundaries of separation. These boundaries, or points in time re what I consider to be a false premise. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the past and future, as we experience them, are within the present then there is not three distinct periods. — Metaphysician Undercover
But this still allows that the past and future might extend outside the present as well. Think of a Venn diagram of past and future, overlapping at the present, for example. In no way can this be described as three distinct periods of time. However, both past and future are within the present, and also extend outside the present. — Metaphysician Undercover
What you apparently fail to understand is that my use is designed to be incompatible with yours
— Metaphysician Undercover
You designed it that way?
— Luke
Yes, of course, that is the point. — Metaphysician Undercover
The conventional way, which you describe requires arbitrary points, or boundaries in time, to separate distinct periods of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, these points and boundaries are nowhere to be found in our experience of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
So "past" and "future" are conceptions within the mind of the being, at the present, who uses these conceptions to make judgements. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the "past (B) and future (B) times" are past and future relative to those judgements. — Metaphysician Undercover
And the thinking being may use projections to extend one's judgement to things outside of one's mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, so past and future come before and after the present, respectively. In fact, that's what these words are typically used to mean. — Luke
And my argument has been that if you want to place the past and the future within the present time, then you need another present time inside that, that these past and future times actually come before and after. The words create the distinction. You are misusing these words. — Luke
Why do they need to be within the present? — Luke
Okay. But the past is not before the present and the future is not after the present in this example (per your second premise). Of course you will say that some of it is, but then you will need another present which completely is. That's what coming before and after means. — Luke
No, the meaning of the words requires those arbitrary points. — Luke
Are you saying that everyone uses the words "past", "present" and "future" incorrectly? — Luke
Since we can think about the past or the future in the present, then those times are present? — Luke
No, the meaning of the words requires those arbitrary points.
— Luke
No, the meaning of the words does not require "points". The points are just a mathematical tool applied in the practise of measurement. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Correct" and "incorrect" are a matter of convention, meaning consistent with or inconsistent with a specific conventions. "Truth" is a matter of consistent with reality. What I am saying is that the conventions which are employed for the purpose of measurement are principles which are not consistent with reality. Therefore when people talk about points in time they speak correctly, but not truthfully. — Metaphysician Undercover
This feature of "the present", as the perspective of the observer manifests as the relativity of simultaneity. — Metaphysician Undercover
You can forget about mathematical "points". The upshot is that there is no overlap between them; no part of the past or the future "inside" the present. — Luke
When have the conventional meanings of "past", "present" and "future" been "employed for the purpose of measurement"? — Luke
You have changed the meanings of "past", "present" and "future" to try and accommodate relativity? — Luke
As I said in my first post, by the time you say "now", it is in the past. By the time someone hears you say "now" it is in the past. That's the unavoidable reality. And if you say that what was meant by "now" is a period of time encompassing both speaking and hearing, then there is both before and after inside the now. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, any time that someone uses "the present" to refer to a period of time, anyone can divide that period of time into past and future, consequently there is "overlap". — Metaphysician Undercover
If you really believe what you say, tell me how "the present" can refer to anything other than a dimensionless mathematical point separating past from future, which everyone must respect, if there is to be no overlap in the usage of these terms. — Metaphysician Undercover
A future is presupposed prior to measurement as the time which will be measured. — Metaphysician Undercover
A present moment is designated to start the measurement. The time going past is measured until another designated present moment. — Metaphysician Undercover
Have you ever used a stopwatch? — Metaphysician Undercover
You are repeating your error of conflating "before" with "past" and "after" with "future". These are not interchangeable terms. If before and after are inside the now, it does not follow that past and future are inside the now, because past and future are determined relative to now. — Luke
Nonsense. Past and future are determined relative to the present. The present is not divisible into past and future, otherwise it would not be the present. — Luke
No part of the present can be in the past because if it were then it would no longer be in the present, and no part of the future can be in the present because if it were then it would no longer be in the future. Likewise, no part of the past can be in the present because if it were then it would not yet be in the past, and no part of the present can be in the future because if it were then it would not yet be in the present. — Luke
The present could be a dimensionless mathematical point or it could be 1,000 years long and, either way, it would still not overlap the past or future. The past is before the present and the future is after the present. — Luke
This is not part of the measurement... — Luke
As I said in my first post, by the time you say "now", it is in the past. By the time someone [***ELSE***] hears you say "now" it is in the past. That's the unavoidable reality. And if you say that what was meant by "now" is a period of time encompassing both speaking and hearing, then there is both before and after inside the now.
— Metaphysician Undercover
You are repeating your error of conflating "before" with "past" and "after" with "future". These are not interchangeable terms. If before and after are inside the now, it does not follow that past and future are inside the now, because past and future are determined relative to now.
— Luke
I explained this. "Now" is the human perspective. Both, past/future, before/after, are judgements made from within that perspective. The human subject is a sensing being, and such judgements are made from within that being. Therefore past/future are within "the present". "The present" is the temporal position of the sentient being and past/future are judgements made within.. To put past/future outside the present requires projection, extrapolation. Putting past/future outside the present of the sentient being is a further process which can only be understood after a firm grasp of past/future within the sentient being is established. — Metaphysician Undercover
Any example that anyone gives as what is referred to as "the present" can always be broken down by someone else, and denied as the true "present". — Metaphysician Undercover
Look at the examples I already gave. If someone says that 2023 is the present, someone else could say no, July 8 is the present, and the rest of 2023 is past and future. — Metaphysician Undercover
To avoid this problem, and maintain your stipulated requirements "no part of the present can be in the past...etc.", the present must be reduced to a non-dimensional point in time, which separates future from past. — Metaphysician Undercover
Don't you see that if you propose that "the present" is 1,000 years long, or any other period of time, without any overlap of past or future, any reasonable person would reject this proposition, saying that the time period has some past and some future within it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Don't you see that if you propose that "the present" is 1,000 years long, or any other period of time, without any overlap of past or future, any reasonable person would reject this proposition, saying that the time period has some past and some future within it. You could insist that this time period is what you stipulate as "the present", but then you are only being unreasonable, as trying to force your own arbitrary stipulated time period as "the present". So to make your stipulation agreeable, and reasonable, it must be reduced to a mathematical point. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, in your latest post, you refer to the present time as "the temporal position of the sentient being" and "the human perspective" of one individual. — Luke
Therefore, no, you did not explain this. You simply changed your definition of "the present" to suit your argument, and once again did not address mine. — Luke
Disputes over when, or how long, the present time is are irrelevant. Once agreement is reached (or context understood) on that matter, then past and future are determined relative to that. — Luke
No, the present needn't be reduced to a non-dimensional point in time, hence my 1000 years example. You've also given examples of the present time being 2023 or July 8. Once established, the past and future are determined relative to that. — Luke
That people might bicker over the "real" duration of the present is irrelevant. — Luke
If we agree to refer to the current millennium as "the present time" then what comes before the current millennium is the past and what comes after the current millennium is the future, wIthout overlap. Your assertion is therefore refuted. — Luke
Why must it be "reduced to a mathematical point" in order to be "agreeable and reasonable"? You clearly don't agree with it or find it reasonable. — Luke
It is unreasonable to reduce "the human perspective" to the perspective of one human being. Each individual human being makes the judgement concerning "the present", past/future, before/after, but the judgement is "unreasonable" if the perspective of other human beings is not considered in that judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see anyone agreeing with you, that the present is a period of time which lasts for 1,000 years. — Metaphysician Undercover
clearly no one knows the real length of "the present" — Metaphysician Undercover
Why does this require there to be any "overlap" of the past, present and future? — Luke
I don't see the need to create a singular past, present and future that accommodates everyone, everywhere, travelling at all speeds, especially if relativity is acknowledged. — Luke
. A quick Google search suggests this duration ranges from a couple of hundred milliseconds to a couple of seconds. — Luke
Moreover, I don't believe it's a terribly important question. — Luke
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