Just spit balling but how about:
Physical objects are 4D objects extended in space and time as per eternalism.
Consciousness is a non-physical 0D "object" bound to some physical object.
Time doesn't flow but consciousness travels through (its physical host's) time. — Michael
The consciousness of what? If you mean the consciousness of the 4D host, then that is extended across time and doesn’t move. If you mean the consciousness of a 3D part of that 4D host, then all the 3D parts are different and none of them moves. — Luke
My random idea is that the physical host is something like a tunnel and consciousness the occupant. The tunnel is fixed in time and space with consciousness travelling through it. — Michael
The objective world simply is, it does not happen. Only to the gaze of my consciousness, crawling upward along the life line of my body, does a section of this world come to life as a fleeting image in space which continuously changes in time. — Hermann Weyl, Philosophy of Mathematics and Natural Science (1949)
You are simply ignoring my argument. — Luke
The traditional view is a presentist one, where 3D objects move over time. — Luke
If consciousness is underpinned by physical stuff, then how can it move when none of the physical stuff does? — Luke
Why should you be able to treat consciousness as a presentist object in an otherwise universe? — Luke
I'm simply presenting an alternative view, I'm not trying to argue against your view. — Michael
The traditional view is a presentist one, where 3D objects move over time.
— Luke
Yes, and this is apparently in conflict with general relativity (and time reversibility?). — Michael
So I'm offering a hypothetical solution that might resolve the conflict between this and our everyday experience of the (one-way) passage of time. — Michael
If consciousness is underpinned by physical stuff, then how can it move when none of the physical stuff does?
— Luke
I don't know. Much like I don't know how, according to physical presentism, physical objects can move through the unmoving space(time) that underpins them. Again, I'm spit balling. I don't have some consistent and complete mathematical model at hand. — Michael
If dualism is correct then the physical and the mental need not necessarily behave according to the same laws. — Michael
How is it in conflict? — Luke
B-theorists typically emphasize how special relativity eliminates the past/present/future distinction from physical models of space and time. Thus what seems like an awkward way to express facts about time in ordinary English is actually much closer to the way we express facts about time in physics.
it presupposes the experience of time that we have. — Luke
There is no similar study we can do to see how damage/changes to “unmoving space(time)” affects physical objects. — Luke
That’s not something I believe, and I doubt it takes into account the facts as we best understand them. — Luke
But I am arguing against your view. — Luke
An I don't understand why you let the interruption halt the discussion.What I don't understand is why you felt compelled to interrupt a discussion that's been developing for over five pages only to denounce it as "pretty nonsense" — Luke
You're confusing the timeline with the time axis/dimension. The latter is nothing more than a sort of state of what happens in a particular world.Talking about "overwriting" the "timeline" is like talking about "overwriting" the "heightline" or the "widthline" or the "lengthline". It seems pretty nonsense. — Michael
I assume you're also against the growing block theory of time? — Michael
All of your responses (since branching had been abandoned) seem to describe pretty much a growing-block view, with travel to the past truncating the block and resetting the present to the new destination time. You shows little understanding of a view that isn't some kind of presentism (as evidenced below). I can't think of a label that better describes what you've been describing.I'm not against the growing block theory, per se, but I don't necessarily consider it to be the view that I hold. — Luke
I was trying to work with it. It is actually 'travel' under presentism, as opposed to a sort of discontinuous (or at least not time-like) worldline you get under eternalism. But yes, traveling to a time that isn't the present creates all sorts of problems, solved by the apparent god-like ability of the machine to rewrite the present state of the entire universe.Presentists Should Not Believe in Time Travel — Michael
Growing block is a form of presentism, and has a history.If there exists a history then presentism is false.
Yes, commonly held, but not by physicists that understand relativity theory.Argument against motion in eternalism
A major difference between presentism and eternalism is their differing concepts of an object. Presentism takes the commonly held view — Luke
The present is 3D. Growing block and moving spotlight are also presentism (positing a preferred moment that traverses time), but still have 4D spacetime.Presentism takes the ... view that an object is 3D and traverses time.
3D parts of what?? Any object (a car part say) occupies a 4D volume of spacetime. I can't think of a 'part' that is 3D. One can take a 3D cross section (in any direction, not just space-like), resulting in a 3D subset. I think that's what you're referencing.Eternalism takes the uncommonly held view that an object is 4D, that the 4D object exists across time, and that it consists of 3D parts.
Yes, true under both views.If we consider that the motion of an object is basically a change in its position over time. ...
according to presentism, the same 3D object exists at different times.
That sound a lot like moving spotlight, but in the absence of presentism (with a yet unwritten future), it boils down to epiphenomenalism, sort of like watching a movie where the experiencer is in no way capable of influencing the character being experienced.Physical objects are 4D objects extended in space and time as per eternalism.
Consciousness is a non-physical 0D "object" bound to some physical object.
Time doesn't flow but consciousness travels through (its physical host's) time. — Michael
Both imply (but don't explicitly require) a lack of an objective present. SR is nice, but is a local theory, only describing one's immediate environment and not the universe in which we actually live.Sorry, it was special relativity, not general relativity — Michael
The experience of time is the same under both views. Relativity theory is not in any way a theory about how biological experience works.Well, yes. I think it self-evident that I experience the passage of time. I want a theory of time that can account for that.
Spacetime does not change. It isn't embedded in time, so it cannot evolve over time. Objects ARE contained by time, and thus change over time. Treating spacetime as an object is a category error.There is no similar study we can do to see how damage/changes to “unmoving space(time)” affects physical objects. — Luke
A major difference between presentism and eternalism is their differing concepts of an object. Presentism takes the commonly held view
— Luke
Yes, commonly held, but not by physicists that understand relativity theory. — noAxioms
Eternalism takes the uncommonly held view that an object is 4D, that the 4D object exists across time, and that it consists of 3D parts.
— Luke
3D parts of what?? — noAxioms
Any object (a car part say) occupies a 4D volume of spacetime. I can't think of a 'part' that is 3D. — noAxioms
One can take a 3D cross section (in any direction, not just space-like), resulting in a 3D subset. I think that's what you're referencing. — noAxioms
If we consider that the motion of an object is basically a change in its position over time. ...
according to presentism, the same 3D object exists at different times.
Yes, true under both views. — noAxioms
There is no similar study we can do to see how damage/changes to “unmoving space(time)” affects physical objects.
— Luke
Spacetime does not change. — noAxioms
Alright, but when in a discussion where the implications of a specific theory (or its alternatives) are very relevant, coming into the discussion in ignorance of that theory doesn't put you in a position where your view can be coherently argued.Yes, because most people are not physicists that understand relativity theory. Hence, "commonly held". — Luke
I see what you're saying. It's a funny way of putting it, but I suppose so. I would have called them cross sections instead of 'parts'.3D parts of the 4D object.
Alright, but when in a discussion where the implications of a specific theory (or its alternatives) are very relevant, coming into the discussion in ignorance of that theory doesn't put you in a position where your view can be coherently argued. — noAxioms
3D parts of the 4D object.
I see what you're saying. It's a funny way of putting it, but I suppose so. I would have called them cross sections instead of 'parts'. — noAxioms
All this is a side topic. — noAxioms
None of the post was about time travel, and your rules continue to be evasive.
Suppose I take my (stationary) machine and go back half a second. There's obviously a machine sitting at the targeted destination, so where do we materialize? Does the machine of 1/2 second ago get trod upon and destroyed, both machines destroyed (car crash style), or does it find somewhere/somewhen else to materialize? What's the rule here? — noAxioms
Yes, if the car/person jumps to the same location as another car/person then they would all die/explode/cause a black hole/etc. — Luke
It's just that every attempt at describing things in eternalist terms still adds references to flow or other implications of a special moment in time.What makes you think I'm ignorant of the theory of eternalism? — Luke
It seems I am.For someone who regularly accuses me of ignorance of concepts in the philosophy of time, I find it amusing that you are obviously unfamiliar with the concept of temporal parts.
This is also mostly a choice of how to use the language, but the tense 'can be happening' in the absence of an explicit time, constitutes an implicit reference to the present, and such references should be avoided. I've said this repeatedly.Before your break, we were discussing whether events can happen (or be happening) in eternalism, so I don't consider a further discussion of the implications of eternalism to be a side topic.
Not at all, but it treats it differently. Different interpretations work in one interpretation or the other, but most not in both.You appeared to be arguing that eternalism is the only theory that can make sense of time travel.
Motion in a block universe is a difference of location over time, just as it is in presentism. What was you argument against that again? Do you deny this definition, or deny that it applies to either view?Besides, you completely ignored my argument against motion in an eternalist universe, just as prior to your break, you never replied to my argument that Alice0 cannot be the original Alice.
Then time travel is mostly impossible the way you envision it since there is always something (air, dust, bugs, trees, whatever) at the destination, unless one chooses to materialize in deep space, and none of your scenarios do that. But here you suddenly suggest that materialization at a location that already has something results in the destruction of the machine and whatever was there before.Yes, if the car/person jumps to the same location as another car/person then they would all die/explode/cause a black hole/etc.
What makes you think I'm ignorant of the theory of eternalism?
— Luke
It's just that every attempt at describing things in eternalist terms still adds references to flow or other implications of a special moment in time. — noAxioms
You do seem to be more familiar with the glossary as used in the philosophy sites. I come from more of a physics background where such terms and distinctions are not important. I've never heard a physicist refer to a 3D part of a 4D object, but apparently SEP is full of that sort of thing, and you linking to those sites has helped me see what the language is all about. — noAxioms
The SEP site describes spatial parts that are extended (hand, feet and such), but when it comes to temporal parts, it seems not to allow any extension to them, which seems an inconsistent use of the term 'parts' to me — noAxioms
The two most popular accounts of persistence are perdurance theory (perdurantism) and endurance theory (endurantism). Perdurantists believe that ordinary things like animals, boats and planets have temporal parts (things persist by ‘perduring’). Endurantists believe that ordinary things do not have temporal parts; instead, things are wholly present whenever they exist (things persist by ‘enduring’). This looks like a straightforward ontological disagreement, a dispute about what exists. Perdurantists think that objects have both spatial and temporal parts, while endurantists think that they only have spatial parts. — SEP Temporal Parts
Motion in a block universe is a difference of location over time, just as it is in presentism. — noAxioms
What was you argument against that again? — noAxioms
Do you deny this definition, or deny that it applies to either view? — noAxioms
Also, it was you that took the break, never replying to anything from my post a week ago. — noAxioms
Been away a while. — noAxioms
Then time travel is mostly impossible the way you envision it since there is always something (air, dust, bugs, trees, whatever) at the destination, — noAxioms
But here you suddenly suggest that materialization at a location that already has something results in the destruction of the machine and whatever was there before. — noAxioms
So Alice goes back 30 seconds, crosses the track, and the Alice behind travels back 30 seconds later and lands on the first traveling Alice, and both traveling Alices die, leaving just the younger Alice approaching the tracks, who finds the wreckage of the collision there, and thinks twice about adding herself to the heap. Problem solved, but Alice misses her interview appointment and doesn't land the desperately needed job,. — noAxioms
It is not an assumption, but rather an observation that those words can be applied to a block view, and that they don't mean that it is an assumption that time itself is what flows or moves.It is your assumption that events happen (which you differentiate from mere existence) in an eternalist universe which suggests some sort of flow or motion in an eternalist universe. — Luke
I didn't read it that way. The endurantists statements you make seem to consider objects to have temporal extension (since a reference to 'wholly present is a reference to all events in the object's worldline, and that is, in the absence of a preferred moment presumption, an eternalist stance.Perdurantism has temporal extension; endurantism does not.
Perdurantists believe that ordinary things like animals, boats and planets have temporal parts (things persist by ‘perduring’). Endurantists believe that ordinary things do not have temporal parts; instead, things are wholly present whenever they exist (things persist by ‘enduring’).
Objects of course. I'm at home at noon, and at grandma's house at 1, a different location (relative to the frame of the surface of Earth) over an hour's time.Motion in a block universe is a difference of location over time, just as it is in presentism.
— noAxioms
Motion and/or location of what, though?
Well I just applied that definition to a 4D object just above.My argument is that the definition of motion as 'a difference of location over time' applies only to 3D objects.
OK, this is just a refusal to use the typical identity convention, that me at one moment is not the same me a second later, but rather two separate entities. Regardless of a presentist or eternalist stance, if that identity convention is used, then indeed, nothing can move, by definition. There are valid attacks on the usual identity convention, so this can be a reasonable alternate convention. I think I can disassemble any identify convention by choosing the right example, so I don't suggest any one convention is necessarily correct.Since each 3D part (of the 4D object) exists at a different time, then no 3D part moves or changes its location over time.
That usage of 'move' does not conform to the definition given, so no, it isn't analogous.It would be analogous to part of a steel bar "moving" along its own length; it doesn't happen.
My bad. Some of the notifications are not coming through. Will try to reply to parts not covered since.I have no idea why you think I never replied to your post from a week ago.
I asked for how you envision interaction with material already present at the target destination. Your answer was simply 'die/explode'. So perhaps the answer needs to be changed. Maybe it handles air better, by what, pushing it aside first? Absorbing it (which probably covers 'die' pretty well)? The answer you gave does not imply that it simply replaces what was there with a new state (terminator style, except with electrical effects preceding).How would air, dust or bugs at the destination prevent time travel?
That's a different answer. So it assesses the target, and selects somewhere close? Does it have a limit as to how far (both spatially and temporally) it is willing to look for a satisfactory point in which to insert itself? What does it do with the stuff that is already at the selected point?If the machine can time travel, then it can probably find a safe place to arrive.
Two travel events (both by younger Alice, traveling for the first time ever), each one making a clone, so yes, three of them. Did you forget the machine makes clones?You've lost me here. There are three Alices?
Depends on your identity convention. Which do you consider to be the original in the just-truncated history, the one that traveled, or the younger one that has not, but is about to? When she does, at noon there are two or three Alices, depending on the microsecond timing. If the 2nd destination event happens ever so slightly sooner than noon, it erases the noon event of the appearance of the Alice that makes it across the tracks, and there still remain two Alices, the one that just appears, and the one 30 seconds back that is approaching the crossing and is going to hit the button in 30 seconds.Alice goes back 30 seconds. Okay. Then there is also an "Alice behind". Is she the same Alice as the one who just went back 30 seconds?
She is always there. Nobody traveled back far enough to erase her from history. She's the one that has never traveled before, and is late for her appointment.Apparently not, since those two Alices die after one lands on the other. So, where did "Alice behind" come from?
It seems you convention is to consider the traveler to the original, and the other in the timeline to be the clones.However, now a third Alice approaches the tracks to find the wreck of the collision that killed the other two Alices.
Using your convention, the original goes back (Alice1), who crosses the tracks,. Alice2 is 30 a clone, 30 seconds younger, and will get to the track in 25 seconds and will decide to go back 30 seconds to make it across. Alice2 goes back to noon, explodes and dies in a collision with identically aged Alice1 who also appears just there, and Alice3 (30 seconds younger than 1 and 2) will get there in 25 seconds.Where did third Alice come from? Was it only the first Alice who time travelled?
They are all Alice, but I put numbers on them to keep track of the clones. I used your convention.If these are different people then why did you call them all Alice? This is very confusing.
If it doesn't wait for the destination to be written, then yes, it is blank. If it just makes up a state to write into that blank space, then fine, it puts something there, all very BTTF. Nobody can tell anything is weird except those who witness (or better, catch on video) the appearance of the time machine out of nowhere.Your argument is supposedly that my presentist model entails a blank future universe.
Your model had truncation. This statement seems in contradiction with that term, which sort of implies that when the present is moved back to 1990, the written state of things between 1990 and 2024 is reverted back to a blank state. Now you suggest otherwise. All very self contradictory. Perhaps more clarification is needed as to what exactly happens to the 34 years between when the present is moved back to 1990.I could say that the future has a definite physical existence prior to the time travel
And encounters a slow version of the grandfather paradox where he is threatened with nonexistence by changing the circumstances leading to his birth, a different story than the one you tell. Anyway, that story is full of contradictions, and it doesn't explicitly call out the interpretation of time it is using. The movie probably contradicts any valid interpretation of time.I think many works of fiction depict time travel as I depict it in my model, where the time traveller travels to, and inserts themselves into, a time they have never visited before (as a time traveller). For example, Marty McFly was never in 1955 prior to his first time travel event, and his time travel results in changes to the 1985 he departed (i.e. he overwrites the timeline).
In a growing block model, the past exists but the future does not, but will eventually. Hence the wait. In a moving spotlight model, both exist, and it is merely a matter of 1, moving the spotlight, and 2, creating a destination state that is compatible with the identity convention of choice. In raw presentism, backwards time travel is impossible because the destination doesn't exist, and never will again. Under eternalism, a branching model in Hilbert space is probably the best, but world creation is not really time travel without a simultaneity convention between separate worlds.Presumably backwards time travel works differently. Why should the machine have to wait in forwards time travel if it is not required to wait in backwards time travel?
Putting them in a sequence is a choice, a natural choice, as I've illustrated. I can create a series of pictures that a child can order in apparent causal order, not necessarily in the order in which the pictures were drawn.Why do the events happen in a sequence when they don't exist in a sequence? That is, events do not flow into and out of existence sequentially in an eternalist universe, like they do in a presentist universe. So, why do they happen sequentially in an eternalist universe?
I don't argue for meaningful time 'before the big bang', given a realist definition of the universe as 'all there is', there would probably be more than what is accounted for by just the spacetime that we know. The ability to temporally order the other parts is likely meaningless, so different language is needed to discuss such things.You seemed to be arguing that there are no events before the big bang even though there are times before the big bang,
It is not an assumption, but rather an observation that those words can be applied to a block view, and that they don't mean that it is an assumption that time itself is what flows or moves. — noAxioms
Water flows. The wheels on the bus move. The sinking of the Titanic happens in 1912. None of those statements imply a presumption of a preferred moment in time, and that one presumption is the only fundamental difference between the views. — noAxioms
Perdurantists believe that ordinary things like animals, boats and planets have temporal parts (things persist by ‘perduring’). Endurantists believe that ordinary things do not have temporal parts; instead, things are wholly present whenever they exist (things persist by ‘enduring’).
— SEP Temporal Parts
I didn't read it that way. The endurantists statements you make seem to consider objects to have temporal extension (since a reference to 'wholly present is a reference to all events in the object's worldline, and that is, in the absence of a preferred moment presumption, an eternalist stance. — noAxioms
Some philosophers believe that you take up time by having different temporal parts at different times. Your spatial parts are things like your head, your feet and your nose; your temporal parts are things like you-yesterday, you-today and you-tomorrow. If you have different temporal parts, this would explain how you can exist at different times, and it would also explain how you can have different properties at different times (you-yesterday hasn’t heard of temporal parts, you-tomorrow is an expert). According to these philosophers, then, persisting through time is pretty much like extending through space: it’s all a matter of parts. — SEP Temporal Parts
Other philosophers reject this picture. They argue that you persist through time as a whole: it’s not just a part of you sitting in front of the computer right now, it’s you, the whole you! — SEP Temporal Parts
The endurantist stance, as stated, needs clarification since it seems contradictory. First of all, there is the statement about being present (not absent) when it exists, but 'when it exists' is ambiguous. Consider the Andromeda 'paradox'. Is the en-route invasion of Earth fleet wholly present in 2024 or does it absent, according to endurantists? The answer is ambiguous due to relativity of simultaneity. The presentists don't have this problem with the Andromeda scenario. — noAxioms
The other contradiction I see:is that I wholly am present in the year 2000, which includes my tonsils, but my tonsils in particular are absent in 2000, so they are both present (as part of something present) and absent in 2000 (as just the tonsils), a contradiction. So as I said, clarification is needed to clean up such examples. — noAxioms
Objects of course. I'm at home at noon, and at grandma's house at 1, a different location (relative to the frame of the surface of Earth) over an hour's time. — noAxioms
My argument is that the definition of motion as 'a difference of location over time' applies only to 3D objects.
— Luke
Well I just applied that definition to a 4D object just above. — noAxioms
Since each 3D part (of the 4D object) exists at a different time, then no 3D part moves or changes its location over time.
— Luke
OK, this is just a refusal to use the typical identity convention, that me at one moment is not the same me a second later, but rather two separate entities. — noAxioms
Another counterargument to the whole 'separate 3D parts' interpretation is that a 3D part is coordinate system dependent. There are different was to slice a 4D worldline into 3D cross sections, — noAxioms
and absent a preferred angle of slicing, there are not actually any 3D parts, but rather only utterly separate 0D events that are the 'parts'. — noAxioms
It would be analogous to part of a steel bar "moving" along its own length; it doesn't happen.
— Luke
That usage of 'move' does not conform to the definition given, so no, it isn't analogous. — noAxioms
I asked for how you envision interaction with material already present at the target destination. Your answer was simply 'die/explode'. So perhaps the answer needs to be changed. Maybe it handles air better, by what, pushing it aside first? Absorbing it (which probably covers 'die' pretty well)? The answer you gave does not imply that it simply replaces what was there with a new state (terminator style, except with electrical effects preceding).
So if explode/die is the wrong answer, then what is the actual answer? If air is treated differently than other material, where is the line drawn, and how about the bugs, which are definitely not air? How about the tree I mentioned? — noAxioms
If the machine can time travel, then it can probably find a safe place to arrive.
— Luke
That's a different answer. So it assesses the target, and selects somewhere close? Does it have a limit as to how far (both spatially and temporally) it is willing to look for a satisfactory point in which to insert itself? What does it do with the stuff that is already at the selected point? — noAxioms
I can't imagine how many questions it's going to take to get a clear model of that, but it probably won't happen because the machine you envision erases history, so in very short order, all those other machines will be erased from history by the person who travels backwards the furthest. — noAxioms
Alice goes back 30 seconds. Okay. Then there is also an "Alice behind". Is she the same Alice as the one who just went back 30 seconds?
— Luke
Depends on your identity convention. Which do you consider to be the original in the just-truncated history, the one that traveled, or the younger one that has not, but is about to? — noAxioms
If the timing is the other way (which it must be eventually), the 2nd travel event lands exactly on the first one, and the whole explode/die thing occurs, leaving only the younger Alice who will get to the explosion scene 25 seconds after noon. — noAxioms
Where did third Alice come from? Was it only the first Alice who time travelled?
— Luke
Using your convention, the original goes back (Alice1), who crosses the tracks,. Alice2 is 30 a clone, 30 seconds younger, and will get to the track in 25 seconds and will decide to go back 30 seconds to make it across. Alice2 goes back to noon, explodes and dies in a collision with identically aged Alice1 who also appears just there, and Alice3 (30 seconds younger than 1 and 2) will get there in 25 seconds. — noAxioms
From last week: — noAxioms
Totally agree. My usages of 'happens' for instance, in eternalist context, are logically consistent, and many of yours are not. Perhaps you are trying to use the presentist definition of the word in a non-presentist context.The observation that "those words can be applied to a block view" doesn't make it logically consistent (with eternalism) to do so. — Luke
Two of the three imply motion. Motion is not the fundamental difference since both have it. I've said repeatedly: the fundamental different is that presentism posits a preferred moment in time, and eternalism doesn't. That, and only that, is the fundamental difference. All the rest just follows.They all imply motion which, I believe, is the more fundamental difference between the two views.
The perdurantist position seems to very much be about parts, yes. That's for the perdurantists to defend. I've posted some inconsistencies I've found with that.it’s all a matter of parts.
OK, I think I did misread that. The question comes down to then: Is there a difference between somebody claiming to be endurantist and claiming to be presentist? There are several forms of presentism, so perhaps endurantism is but one of them, perhaps 3D presentism, as opposed to growing block, spotlight, and other 4D versions of it.This is the endurantist view. It is consistent with presentism due to the lack of temporal extension of its objects which are, therefore, not divisible into temporal parts.
Yes, I withdraw that. The concept of a worldline implies 4D spacetime, and 3D presentism does not have meaningful worldlines, but 4D versions of it do still have worldlines.Therefore, the phrase "wholly present" is not, as you say, "a reference to all events in the object's worldline".
Actually, there is no Andromeda paradox under presentism, in any of its forms. Presentism denies both premises of special relativity: 1) Physics is the same in any frame. Well, it isn't. The whole point of presentism is a preferred frame, and all the others are wrong. 2) Speed of light is the same in any frame. Under presentism, that's false. The speed varies depending on which direction it is going, relative to any frame which is one of the 'wrong' ones.I agree that the answer depends on which reference frame is present and so may be considered as ambiguous.
However, why do you say that presentists don't have this problem?
You seem to be mixing views in that query, rendering the question meaningless. If you're asking about eternalism, then keep it to those terms. I've never heard an eternalist talk about something being 'wholly present at some time', which seems not even wrong.Are "you" a 3D object that is wholly present at each time or are "you" a 4D object temporally extended over time?
That is a decent description of movement in perdurantist terms, which I find needlessly complicated. The science community never uses such cumbersome terminology to say something so simple, which is why the 'temporal parts' page was largely educational for me.If you're a 4D object then a temporal part of you is home at noon and a different temporal part of you is at grandma's house at 1.
OK, then your definition is confined to a presentist view. That doesn't mean that a non-presentist must use that definition. The definition I gave works for both, and I've never seen a dictionary restrict the definition to 3D things. In short, my google query says 'move' means to change position. The shadow of a pole moves, and it isn't a 3D thing.My argument is that the definition of motion as 'a difference of location over time' applies only to 3D objects.
So per the perdurantists that use that sort of language, 'you' change position over time, but the parts don't. It's still you doing the moving. You're just trying to leverage your private definition onto a view that defines the word differently, which of course makes it contradictory. But that's a straw man fallacy.The 4D object is all "you", but it's not the same temporal part (3D part/object) of you at one time as it is at another time.
Yes, but one slice can be at gradmas house and another (at the same time) is not, so I find it to be a problem. The 3D things posited to 'exist at a time' are ambiguous without also positing a preferred frame.You still end up with different temporal parts no matter how you slice it
Not true actually. You just need to slice it the right way.It is analogous because no 3D part of a 4D object can change its location over time
This implies that all the points of a steel bar are at the same location at a given time. The bar changes its location over length instead of a change in location over time. This fits the definition of change, if not motion. Other examples of change not over time: The air pressure changes with altitude.just as no part of a rigid steel bar can change its location along its own length
No, but I do if I'm suddenly in the same place as air that wasn't there just before. If the machine is nothing but an air-filled balloon, then suddenly twice the air would be in there, and it might very well explode from the extra pressure.Does air die/explode?
No, that is coming from one side, pushing aside what was there. OK, so maybe it pushes stuff aside. In what direction? Does it do it instantly? That would be a nuke explosion. So it takes time, perhaps expanding outward from a point, which will certainly destroy a Delorean inside of which this growing object suddenly appears. But in such a case, the new machine is alive, and any object already there is shoved aside, possibly crushing or exploding it. The tree would not take it well, and the remainder would probably fall and crush the machine that just teleported under it.It would be no different to moving the time machine to a particular location in normal time.
Doesn't work since the form physics is normal motion, say from one side. Where does that start? From how far away does it effectively come? If it comes from a side, then somewhere it has to initiially appear, and not come from even further to the side. So far, the answer is that it teleports in somewhat off-center of target (destroying whatever is there), and then forcibly moving over to the actual target spatial location, possibly pushing/crushing the additional objects that are there, and of course crashing your own machine, since a vehicle collision is what happens when two things move into the same location in normal motion.Let's say that whatever happens to the material already present at the target destination if we moved the time machine there in normal time is the same/similar to what would happen if we moved the time machine there via time travel.
The Alice story cannot proceed without knowing this. Also the extreme example of setting your machine to go back half a second.I don't see understand why you are pressing this point. What difference does it make?
No we can't. My examples are specifically designed to reduce the odds of safety to zero. I'm finding flaws in the view envisioned, which I thought was the purpose of all these posts. The half-second just is obviously going to lang on the machine that is there. Destroying it isn't such a bad thing in that case, but I need to know if that's what happens. If the jump finds somewhere more (but not completely) 'empty' nearby, would it teleport there instead? That's a different solution than the bang-and-push thing you described before. It results in different problems.Surely we can imagine that the time machine can arrive safely
What does it do to avoid it? Go to the moon instead? NASA would love it if your machine did exactly that. So much effort saved. Who cares that it's a time machine. It's also a space teleporter.but let's assume it has the technology to avoid it.
But the possibility of time travel, as you describe it, has exactly those ramifications. If you don't want that, then a different model should be assumed.You seem more concerned about the ramifications of time travel - the end of humanity or the destruction caused by the time machine - than you are with the possibility of time travel.
Alice 1 has already traveled and will not do so again. Alice2 will travel back when she gets to the track, cloning everybody on that timeline, so I guess Alice1 vanishes as does everybody not in a machine that goes back in time.According to my convention, Alice1 is the original; the time traveller. Alice2 is the 30-seconds younger version of Alice1 who exists in the past (just as young Bob exists in the past of time traveller old Bob). I cannot see how both:
(i) Alice1 will time travel back 30 seconds after crossing the tracks; and
(ii) Alice2 will time travel back 30 seconds, 5 seconds before crossing the tracks.
Everybody time travels at noon+30 seconds, back to exactly noon. At noon+25 seconds each virgin Alice gets to the tracks and has 5 seconds to assess the situation and decide to go back 30 seconds or not.and if Alice2 time travels 5 seconds before crossing the tracks
Maybe. She makes it to the crossing too late, hits the button, goes back 30 seconds, and if her collision with Alice4 isn't noticed, she probably considers it mission accomplished and proceeds to cross the tracks just before the gates start coming down. But I don't think the collision will go unnoticed, which likely will effect whether she proceeds across the tracks or not.then Alice2 will not proceeed to cross the tracks
Alice1 is the first to jump, and lands on nobody. She proceeds across and is truncated out of existence when Alice2 pushes her button. Alice1 is the only happy Alice, so it's a shame her life ends so abruptly.If Alice1 lands on and kills Alice2
My usages of 'happens' for instance, in eternalist context, are logically consistent, and many of yours are not. Perhaps you are trying to use the presentist definition of the word in a non-presentist context. — noAxioms
There are several forms of presentism, so perhaps endurantism is but one of them, — noAxioms
perhaps 3D presentism, as opposed to growing block, spotlight, and other 4D versions of it. — noAxioms
The concept of a worldline implies 4D spacetime, and 3D presentism does not have meaningful worldlines, but 4D versions of it do still have worldlines. — noAxioms
Actually, there is no Andromeda paradox under presentism, in any of its forms. Presentism denies both premises of special relativity — noAxioms
Are "you" a 3D object that is wholly present at each time or are "you" a 4D object temporally extended over time?
— Luke
You seem to be mixing views in that query, rendering the question meaningless. — noAxioms
My argument is that the definition of motion as 'a difference of location over time' applies only to 3D objects.
— Luke
OK, then your definition is confined to a presentist view. — noAxioms
The shadow of a pole moves, and it isn't a 3D thing. — noAxioms
The 4D object is all "you", but it's not the same temporal part (3D part/object) of you at one time as it is at another time.
— Luke
So per the perdurantists that use that sort of language, 'you' change position over time, but the parts don't. It's still you doing the moving. — noAxioms
You're just trying to leverage your private definition onto a view that defines the word differently, which of course makes it contradictory. But that's a straw man fallacy. — noAxioms
So saying 'Floyd moves from home to grandma's house over that hour' works just fine in both views because no reference to that additional entity is made.
I don't know what purpose you think is being served by trying to argue otherwise. — noAxioms
You still end up with different temporal parts no matter how you slice it
— Luke
Yes, but one slice can be at gradmas house and another (at the same time) is not, so I find it to be a problem. The 3D things posited to 'exist at a time' are ambiguous without also positing a preferred frame. — noAxioms
It is analogous because no 3D part of a 4D object can change its location over time
— Luke
Not true actually. You just need to slice it the right way. — noAxioms
This implies that all the points of a steel bar are at the same location at a given time. The bar changes its location over length instead of a change in location over time. This fits the definition of change, if not motion. — noAxioms
No, but I do if I'm suddenly in the same place as air that wasn't there just before. If the machine is nothing but an air-filled balloon, then suddenly twice the air would be in there, and it might very well explode from the extra pressure. — noAxioms
So Alice2 and Alice4 collide at the tracks, and what happens thereafter depends on your collision resolution description that you're reluctant to describe. — noAxioms
I don't like your identity convention since it clones everybody in the universe except the occupants of the machine, but I am using your convention above. — noAxioms
Alice 1 has already traveled and will not do so again. Alice2 will travel back when she gets to the track, cloning everybody on that timeline, so I guess Alice1 vanishes as does everybody not in a machine that goes back in time.
Alice3 is 30 seconds away from the tracks, and has never traveled. Alice4 is at the crossing, a clone of Alice1 that did the first travel. (I neglected to name here Alice4 in my prior description, but by your convention, two new Alices get created when Alice2 goes back. So Alice2 and Alice4 collide at the tracks — noAxioms
"To take place, occur" is what I get from a google query. That works fine, since the definition isn't specifically crafted to exclude the undesirables. To exist means 'to have being', to be real. I can be an eternalist (or presentist for that matter) without being a realist, so an event need not exist in order to happen.I didn't realise there were two different definitions of 'happens'. — Luke
I could probably craft one that excludes the undesirable presentist view, but doing so wouldn't in any way constitute evidence that a view excluded is wrong.What is the eternalist definition of 'happens'?
Then time travel isn't possible under that definition of presentism since it would constitute travel to some destination that doesn't exist.presentism holds that only present objects exist.
I do, because all of the alternate versions still posit a preferred moment in time, which is the fundamental different between any of them and eternalism.I don't use the term "presentism" to refer to any "4D versions of it".
Presentism doesn't face this problem, because only at most one of those frames can be correct, and probably neither are.Objects lack temporal extension under both presentism and endurantism. Both theories face the same problem if there are two or more frames of reference (or "present moments") involved.
I try not to hold hard beliefs. I know both, and can discuss either. The purdurantist wording seems silly to me. I've never seen its terminology used in any practical discussion, such as in the science community. And science definitely uses both eternalism (especially in a discussion of cosmology, relativity, physics, chemistry), and presentism (astronomy, climate science, biology, anthropology). I never hear anybody use 'temporal parts' or 'wholly present'. One context uses B-series terminology, and other contexts use A-series.The question was basically asking if you are a presentist (endurantist) or an eternalist (perdurantist).
No, your definition is thus confined, worded specifically to exclude a view you find undesirable. 'The definition' : 'to change position' isn't so confined.The definition of motion is confined to a presentist view, I agree
No, a purdurantist universe contains this. Don't confuse the two.An eternalist universe contains 4D objects
It does not follow that the lack of motion of a 3D 'part' implies the 4D object does not meaningfully exhibit motion.. At no point in any of that do you mention that the 4D object has one location at a given time, and a different location at a different time (which is how an eternalist would word it), which is, by definition (not by your definition), motion. The 3D references are perdurantist phrasing, and the argument above is still doesn't demonstrate that the object doesn't move, only that a specific temporal part doesn't, which of course it cannot since it would need time to do the moving.4D objects are divisible into different/discrete 3D parts
Each 3D part of a 4D object exists at a different time
No 3D part of a 4D object exists at more than one time
A 3D part must exist at more than one time in order to be able to change over time
No 3D part of a 4D object can change over time
No 3D part of a 4D object can change its location over time
Therefore, no 3D part of a 4D object can move, according to the given definition of motion
Nonsense. That's what a frame change is, slicing through the same point (a given event, which has a specific time) at a different angle, which makes for two very different temporal slices. I take it by this that you're entirely unfamiliar with Minkowskian geometry.You cannot have two temporal slices at the same time.
If I slice a 4D object across a spatial axis instead of across the time axis, I end up with a 3D object that has one temporal dimension and two spatial dimensions. The location in 2D space changes over time.It is analogous because no 3D part of a 4D object can change its location over time
— Luke
Not true actually. You just need to slice it the right way.
— noAxioms
Could you explain further?
How it handles collision is critical to identifying the implications. If I don't know how the machine handles targetting an event where there's already something else, then we cannot explore the implications of a trivial situation where that necessarily occurs.I'm interested in the philosophy of time, and the implications on the different theories of time.
You change the story several times, so I wasn't sure which you had settled on. OK, so they both die, Alice3 comes upon the death scene and perhaps doesn't decide to add herself to the wreckage, and chooses to miss her important appointment instead. The universe doesn't end (this time).I've said several times that they both die. Why won't you accept it?
There's four Alices,. Sounds like cloning to me.That's one way of looking at it, I guess. But it also overwrites the timeline and deletes the timeline that the traveller departs from. I wouldn't call that cloning.
That was the convention I had initially chosen. We switched to yours. My convention had only three Alices (not four), and everybody else (Alice or otherwise) was an original. In a way your convention is better, because each person (traveler or not) has a unique history. My convention has a given person (the guy mowing his lawn nearby say) multiple histories that play out in different ways, which violates identity rules.The only one being "cloned", or the only one who has two versions of themself in existence at the same time, is the time traveller.
Clone of Alice1, made by the travel of Alice2. Alice4 lives but a moment and is gone in the collision with Alice2. Alice2 lives 30 seconds, and dies in collision with Alice4. I did say that Alice1 is the only happy Alice. It sucks to be any of the others.Where did Alice4 come from?
Right. Her travel creates Alice2. Alice1 never time travels again. She lives but 30 more seconds and is truncated into oblivion.Alice1 is still Alice1 after she time travels. She is the original.
No, Alice2 lands on Alice4. Alice1 doesn't land on anybody, which contributes heavily to her being the happy one.So it is Alice1 who lands on Alice2 and they die as a result
Well, 1 is gone, 2 and 4 die in a crash, so only Alice3 survives (if she chooses to lay off the button). If she still hits the button (but in a different place than where the wreck is, and for maybe a different jump than 30 seconds, then she can make a whole bunch more dead Alices, herself included, since no actual traveler survives the experience.and then the timeline continues without any Alices
presentism holds that only present objects exist.
— Luke
Then time travel isn't possible under that definition of presentism since it would constitute travel to some destination that doesn't exist. — noAxioms
Objects lack temporal extension under both presentism and endurantism. Both theories face the same problem if there are two or more frames of reference (or "present moments") involved.
— Luke
Presentism doesn't face this problem, because only at most one of those frames can be correct, and probably neither are.
Eternalism doesn't face the problem since the phrase 'present moments' is meaningless. — noAxioms
The definition of motion is confined to a presentist view, I agree
No, your definition is thus confined, worded specifically to exclude a view you find undesirable. 'The definition' : 'to change position' isn't so confined. — noAxioms
An eternalist universe contains 4D objects
— Luke
No, a purdurantist universe contains this. Don't confuse the two. — noAxioms
4D objects are divisible into different/discrete 3D parts
Each 3D part of a 4D object exists at a different time
No 3D part of a 4D object exists at more than one time
A 3D part must exist at more than one time in order to be able to change over time
No 3D part of a 4D object can change over time
No 3D part of a 4D object can change its location over time
Therefore, no 3D part of a 4D object can move, according to the given definition of motion
— Luke
It does not follow that the lack of motion of a 3D 'part' implies the 4D object does not meaningfully exhibit motion. — noAxioms
At no point in any of that do you mention that the 4D object has one location at a given time, and a different location at a different time (which is how an eternalist would word it), which is, by definition (not by your definition), motion. — noAxioms
You cannot have two temporal slices at the same time.
— Luke
Nonsense. That's what a frame change is, slicing through the same point (a given event, which has a specific time) at a different angle, which makes for two very different temporal slices. I take it by this that you're entirely unfamiliar with Minkowskian geometry. — noAxioms
The only one being "cloned", or the only one who has two versions of themself in existence at the same time, is the time traveller.
— Luke
That was the convention I had initially chosen. We switched to yours. — noAxioms
Where did Alice4 come from?
— Luke
Clone of Alice1, made by the travel of Alice2. — noAxioms
Time travel under eternalism is simply any non-timelike worldline, and, if you take the SEP definition, any non-straight worldline. The sort of travel you've been envisioning would be a discontinuous worldline. A continuous but not timelike worldline would have an undefined proper time, meaning it's not clear what the subjective duration of the travel should be, but the external experience of the machine would be much like the description of Putnam in SEP. Funny that his machine sort of has to accelerate to some speed (88 mph just like in BTTF) to make the jump.True, but time travel is also not possible under eternalism since nothing moves in a 4D universe. — Luke
According to the article you linked, both are alternate interpretations of persistence. Despite what various articles might call them, neither is a theory since they both lack any empirical falsification test.Presentism is a theory of existence, whereas endurantism is a theory of persistence.
And I've shown otherwise, so you're simply wrong. The eternalists use all the same language as do the presentists, but formally, only references to the nonexistent extra thing is what makes a statement meaningless. Motion has meaning under eternalism since a statement such as 'Floyd takes an hour to move from A to B' has meaning.there is no motion in an eternalist universe, as I have argued.
That wasn't so hard, was it?Surely you mean that a 3D part of the 4D object has one location at a given time and a different 3D part of the 4D object has another location at a different time.
It produces motion by exactly fitting the (not my) definition: Floyd is at one location at one time, and a different location at another. Floyd moves even if what a perdurantist calls his temporal parts do not.You need to explain how two different 3D parts of a 4D object can produce the change required for your definition of motion, when neither of those 3D parts ever changes its temporal or spatial location in the block universe.
Any slicing does this. The positing of a preferred way is known as 'absolutism'. The first premise of relativity is that there isn't a preferred way, but it's a premise, meaning relativity isn't proof against a theory that doesn't accept that premise. The slice can be odd shaped. It need not be flat, but it does need to be space-like, else you end up with events that occur out of causal order.Okay, but which preferred method of slicing allows for a 3D part of a 4D object to change its temporal or spatial location?
All the Alices are herself, and Alice1 made it across the tracks without crashing. Alice4 dies immediately upon coming into existence, and is the shortest-lived Alice.Alice2 can only clone herself.
Mostly right. You didn't mention the Alice that collides and dies with Alice2 in that description (so 3 Alices coexisting at once, but two of them dead). The time machines were cloned as well, so there were 4 of those, one truncated away, two crashed into each other, and the only one remaining is the one never used.Your scenario, as I now understand it, is that Alice1 time travels backwards and "clones" Alice2, such that Alice1 and (Alice1's younger self) Alice2 now co-exist at the same time. If Alice2 now time travels backwards, then she will clone Alice3 (Alice2's younger self) and Alice2 and Alice3 will co-exist at the same time. Alice1 will no longer exist, just as all the people on the timeline when old Bob departs and time travels backwards no longer exist. That's what it means to overwrite the timeline; the timeline reverts back to its earlier state at the traveller's arrival time, except that that time now also includes the time traveller and their time machine.
Presentism is a theory of existence, whereas endurantism is a theory of persistence.
— Luke
According to the article you linked, both are alternate interpretations of persistence. Despite what various articles might call them, neither is a theory since they both lack any empirical falsification test. — noAxioms
Surely you mean that a 3D part of the 4D object has one location at a given time and a different 3D part of the 4D object has another location at a different time.
— Luke
That wasn't so hard, was it? — noAxioms
You need to explain how two different 3D parts of a 4D object can produce the change required for your definition of motion, when neither of those 3D parts ever changes its temporal or spatial location in the block universe.
— Luke
It produces motion by exactly fitting the (not my) definition: Floyd is at one location at one time, and a different location at another. Floyd moves even if what a perdurantist calls his temporal parts do not. — noAxioms
Okay, but which preferred method of slicing allows for a 3D part of a 4D object to change its temporal or spatial location?
— Luke
Any slicing does this. — noAxioms
Alice2 can only clone herself.
— Luke
All the Alices are herself, and Alice1 made it across the tracks without crashing. Alice4 dies immediately upon coming into existence, and is the shortest-lived Alice. — noAxioms
I did misread it, so thanks.Presentism is a theory of existence, whereas endurantism is a theory of persistence.
I think you've misread. I said presentism, not perdurantism. — Luke
But I never disagreed with the 'corrected' statement.Huh? No, it wasn't hard to correct you.
I never said any such thing, in the context of eternalism. The 3D things are (per the perdurantists) separate 'parts' of the 4D thing. It is the 4D thing said to move (change locations over time), not the parts.You are again assuming that Floyd is a 3D object.
I gave an example where this wasn't true, but I know what you mean. To summarize, by definition, no event that is part of Floyd can be at different coordinates in an inertial coordinate system. It's true of a 0d event, even if not necessarily true of 'parts' consisting of 1-3 dimensions. But motion isn't defined as an event having more than one set of coordinates. It is a difference of location at different times, and Floyd meets that definition.No 3D part of Floyd changes its temporal or spatial location
To meet your discriminatory definition maybe. Floyd is home at noon and at grandma's at 1. That is motion by the definition. That's how the language is used by an eternalist. The language is serving its purpose, which is to have meaning, and it does so without needing to change the definition from 'change locations over time'.which is what a 3D part must do in order to meet the definition of motion.
Do you understand a 3D cross section of a 4D object? All the events on the arbitrary slice can be assigned the same time coordinate so long as the slice is space-like. Angle the slice a different way and a different set of events (except those events at the intersection of the different slices) are now assigned the same time coordinate. This is essentially a change of reference frame, coupled with relativity of simultaneity, with which I suspect you are not familiar else you'd not be asking that question. A loaf of bread is often the analogy (slicing a 3D object, with time being the long dimension say) along 2D spatial planes, arbitrarily oriented. A slice through a given event (the center of the loaf say) can be angled in many ways and still include that one event, so all the other events are only part of some slices and not part of the others. That's relativity of simultaneity in bakery terms.Any slicing does this.
— noAxioms
How?
Alice1, at the tracks at t=12:00:30 travels back 30 seconds to being there at exactly noon. So Alice1 is at the tracks at noon. Alice2, at t=12:00:30 also selects that same noon event as her destination, so she clones the Alice1 there and the first-noon version of Alice2 (not at the tracks), to create two new clones Alice4 and Alice3 respectively. Alice 2 and 4 are occupying the same space at the tracks simultaneously, and one doesn't survive that.How does Alice4 (Alice1's clone) come into existence?
It is the 4D thing said to move (change locations over time), not the parts. — noAxioms
Otherwise, you could argue that what moves is Floyd as a 4D object (or some 4D part of Floyd, or the block universe as a whole). However, that would require higher (e.g. 5th, 6th, etc.) dimensions in which the 4D part/object/universe can move. This is not comparable to the motion of 3D objects. — Luke
But motion isn't defined as an event having more than one set of coordinates. It is a difference of location at different times, and Floyd meets that definition. — noAxioms
To meet your discriminatory definition maybe. Floyd is home at noon and at grandma's at 1. That is motion by the definition. That's how the language is used by an eternalist. — noAxioms
'Floyd at noon' indeed describes a 3D object, yes. Floyd at 1 is a different 3D object, but it is all still Floyd, and the difference in Floyd's location over time is, by definition, motion. It is entirely consitent with B-series language which any eternalist uses without contradiction.You are treating Floyd as a 3D object, not as a 4D object. That is not consistent with eternalism. — Luke
'Floyd at noon' indeed describes a 3D object, yes. — noAxioms
Floyd at 1 is a different 3D object, — noAxioms
but it is all still Floyd, — noAxioms
and the difference in Floyd's location over time is, by definition, motion. — noAxioms
Is velocity also forbidden then? — noAxioms
The constant c apparently has no meaning in physics. Hmm... Somebody ought to tell them that they're all talking bunk. — noAxioms
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