OK, You seem to be speaking of change over time as opposed to any other kind of change which may not have a cause/effect relationship.The cause and effect cannot lay at the same point of time since otherwise they would be simultaneous and there cannot be any change. — MoK
Does it? This seems to contradict the assumption of presentism which says that only the present exists, and for change to exist, two different states need to exist. Why must change exist if there exists only the one state?Change exists.
Not 'therefore' since this does not follow by any of the above, but yes, by definition, cause and effect lay at different points in time.Therefore, the cause and effect lay at different points of time.
Nonsequitur. Cause: Asteroid hitting Earth. Effect, years later, dinosaurs are extinct, hardly the immediate future of the asteroid event.Hence the effect must exist in the immediate future if the cause exists at now.
The effect does not exist if the future does not exist. It being immediate is irrelevant.But the effect cannot exist if the immediate future does not exist.
Again, non-sequitur since you've not established that both cause and effect necessarily exist (and also the lack of definition of 'immediate future').Therefore, the immediate future exists when there is a change.
Now this much makes sense.The cause and effect cannot lay at the same point of time since otherwise they would be simultaneous and there cannot be any change. Change exists. Therefore, the cause and effect lay at different points of time. — MoK
The cause and effect cannot lay at the same point of time since otherwise they would be simultaneous and there cannot be any change. Change exists. Therefore, the cause and effect lay at different points of time. — MoK
The cause and effect cannot lay at the same point of time — MoK
Agreed! And also, if they were at different times, then what's 'tween times?You're just getting tangled up in words. The effect is not some separate entity, it is the change. — T Clark
No, I am not talking about presentism or A-series of time since to me both now and immediate future exist whereas in presentism or A-series of time only now exist.The logic here has countless fallacies.
You seem to be presuming presentism (only the present time exists), as evidenced by the A-series language if nothing else, and yet this is not explicitly called out. — noAxioms
No, I am talking about a change with a cause-and-effect relationship.OK, You seem to be speaking of change over time as opposed to any other kind of change which may not have a cause/effect relationship. — noAxioms
Sure change exists. Doesn't it?Does it? — noAxioms
Sure we cannot have any change if there is only one state.This seems to contradict the assumption of presentism which says that only the present exists, and for change to exist, two different states need to exist. Why must change exist if there exists only the one state? — noAxioms
Cause and effect can lay at the same point of time yet in this case we don't have any change. I had to exclude this case to make sure that cause and effect must lay at different points in time if we want to have a change.Not 'therefore' since this does not follow by any of the above, but yes, by definition, cause and effect lay at different points in time. — noAxioms
There is a chain of causes and effects between the asteroid hitting Earth and dinosaurs going extinct.Nonsequitur. Cause: Asteroid hitting Earth. Effect, years later, dinosaurs are extinct, hardly the immediate future of the asteroid event. — noAxioms
By immediate future, I mean the next point in time whether time is discrete or continuous is off-topic.Also, 'immidiate future' is totally undefined. It sort of implies adjacent moments in time with no moments in between, a sort of discreet model of time that 1) has not been posited, and 2) apparently contradicts premise zero, that of presentism, that only one moment in time exists. — noAxioms
It is relevant.The effect does not exist if the future does not exist. It being immediate is irrelevant. — noAxioms
If effect does not exist when cause exists then cause ceases to exist when time passes so there cannot be any effect.Again, non-sequitur since you've not established that both cause and effect necessarily exist (and also the lack of definition of 'immediate future'). — noAxioms
I am not talking about A-series of time.Now if we discard the presentism premise, then we can attempt to follow the same argument without the A-series wording. — noAxioms
So you agree?Now this much makes sense. — noAxioms
As I mentioned before, there is a chain of causes and effects for the dinosaur example.That part still does not follow, per the dinosaur counterexample. — noAxioms
the cause and effect come together to allow a change. — MoK
The effect: Ball 1's speed is reduced and Ball 2's speed is increased as a result of the collision.
The change: The difference between the speed of Ball 1 before and after the collision and the difference between the speed of Ball 2 before and after the collision as well. — MoK
Causation, Relation that holds between two temporally simultaneous or successive events when the first event (the cause) brings about the other (the effect). — MoK
I didn't say you were talking about them, I said you were presuming them by referencing words that only have meaning in them.No, I am not talking about presentism or A-series of time — MoK
There are several variants of presentism, but all of them posit a preferred moment in time.since to me both now and immediate future exist whereas in presentism or A-series of time only now exist.
Change is a different state at different times. That's fairly well defined.Sure change exists.
I suppose it depends on your definition of 'change' and/or 'exists'.Sure we cannot have any change if there is only one state.
That would violate physics unless they were the same event, and a single event cannot meaningfully have a cause/effect relationship with itself.Cause and effect can lay at the same point of time
As there is between any cause and effect events, unless you posit discreet time and/or discreet events. Point is, it doesn't stop the asteroid from being a cause of the extinction effect. I say 'a cause' and not 'the cause' because there are very few effects that are the result of only one cause.There is a chain of causes and effects between the asteroid hitting Earth and dinosaurs going extinct.
'The next point in time' implies adjacent time moments with nothing between. That makes zero sense without a model of discreet time, so it is anything but off topic here.By immediate future, I mean the next point in time whether time is discrete or continuous is off-topic.
That is a non-sequitur again. You exist despite the non-existence of your birth (presuming past events are non-existent, which you seem to support).If effect does not exist when cause exists then cause ceases to exist when time passes so there cannot be any effect.
But you are using it. It's a way of speaking, using references that explicitly or implicitly reference something only meaningful in A-theory of time.I am not talking about A-series of time.
I've rendered no opinions at all. I'm trying to help you put together a coherent argument. The part I reference made no references to things not meaningful in B-theory, which is what I meant by that fragment making sense from that point of view.So you agree?
I didn't define cause and effect in terms of observer.Respectable effort. Cause and effect (CE) is a convenient fiction, very useful and convenient. But I don't think you're getting the point here. The problem is that you define CE in terms of the observer, in the eye of the beholder so to speak. But take away the observer and what exactly is left? — tim wood
Maybe one of them or perhaps a combination.A familiar example from a book may help clarify. A car rolls over on the road, what caused it? "Bad road geometry," says the civil engineer. "Bad suspension," says the auto designer. "Speeding," says the policeman. — tim wood
I have three categories of ontology: Past (does not exist), present near future (exists), and future (future excluding near future which does not exist).There are several variants of presentism, but all of them posit a preferred moment in time.
Growing block says that past and present events exist, future ones do not. Moving spotlight says they all exist, but the 'spotlight' travels across them, making one of the moments preferred. Your variant has not been discussed, but you seem to have not three but four categories of ontology: past, present near future, further future. — noAxioms
So you agree that there was a chain of causes and effects between the asteroid collision and extinction of dinosaurs?As there is between any cause and effect events, unless you posit discreet time and/or discreet events. Point is, it doesn't stop the asteroid from being a cause of the extinction effect. I say 'a cause' and not 'the cause' because there are very few effects that are the result of only one cause. — noAxioms
Let's stick to three events, A, B, and C. A causes B (B exists in the immediate future) at now. At the next moment, A ceases to exist, and B exists at now and causes C (C exists in the immediate future). Etc.What you seem to be proposing is a sort of discreet paired presentism, where there are discreet states A B C etc. State A is the present for some finite duration of time. During that time, state B ('the immediate future') comes into being while state A is still there. The difference between the two is 'existing change' as you put it. Some time after B comes into existence, A ceases to exist and B becomes the present, and then C can come into existence. So it goes on like that, with one or two adjacent discreet states existing at a given time, and if there are two, they are labeled 'present' and 'immediate future'.
Am I close with that, or am totally reading this wrong? — noAxioms
Really?I didn't define cause and effect in terms of observer. — MoK
What is, where is, the relation?Causation, Relation that holds... — MoK
A cause either is a cause or is not a cause.Maybe one of them or perhaps a combination. — MoK
And this the bones of a probably useful story. But what exactly is an event? Does an event take up a certain amount of time? Or no time? And what exactly is a cause? How does something that exists cease to exist? And how does something that does not exist come into existence? Anything can happen in a story; that's among the charms of stories. But as any sort of exact or rigorous account it won't do.Let's stick to three events, A, B, and C. A causes B (B exists in the immediate future) at now. At the next moment, A ceases to exist, and B exists at now and causes C (C exists in the immediate future). Etc. — MoK
Actually, I also did not see a particularly observer dependent wording of any of the descriptions.I didn't define cause and effect in terms of observer. — MoK
With that much I agree.Useful in an informal and non-rigorous way, but not an exact account of anything. — tim wood
Let's use the moving spotlight wording: Something ceases to exist when the spotlight moves away from it. Is that so hard? I'm no presentist, but I see no flaw most definition it uses. My father has ceased to exist, as has perhaps my twitter account. Are details of those necessary? All objects seem to have a finite duration, so a better question would be how some object might manage to not ever cease to exist.How does something that exists cease to exist? — tim wood
That seems to be what I said, so I guess I got pretty close in my attempt to summarize your view. I called them states, not events, since event to me is a point in spacetime, and states are not points.I have three categories of ontology: Past (does not exist), present near future (exists), and future (future excluding near future which does not exist).
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Let's stick to three events, A, B, and C. A causes B (B exists in the immediate future) at now. At the next moment, A ceases to exist, and B exists at now and causes C (C exists in the immediate future). Etc. — MoK
Calling it a chain carries an implication of something linear, rather than a network. There is no single cause of any effect, but the asteroid was indeed a contributor to it. Was it critical? Would the dinos be around today had that thing not hit? Probably none of the species of back then, which would have required said species to not evolve at all in 70 million years. We have alligators today, which is arguably evidence that the dinosaurs are not existence, but the 'dino' part seems to no longer apply.So you agree that there was a chain of causes and effects between the asteroid collision and extinction of dinosaurs? — MoK
But the description does not seem to be grounded in epistemological terms, hence my not seeing the observer involvement.
Perhaps tim wood would care to elaborate. — noAxioms
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