Give me an example, so we can be clear about the argument. — Banno
Because there is no infinitely large number, just as there can be no infinite distance; the idea is untintelligble. — Janus
Just that it would seem there could be no actual infinite number of planets, and hence the argument that a finite number of possible planets would lead to a duplicate earth would seem to fail. — Janus
So, if you or Metaphysician Undercover think there is something captured by the A-series but not by the B-series, set it out; but if all you have to say is "you lose the tense", then you have nothing to say. — Banno
Meanwhile, relativity isn't controversial or anything. — jorndoe
Would you be happy with 6*10^-16 seconds per 2 seconds? How about 9*10^-16 per 3? You can scale the error like that all you like, it still represents the same error rate — fdrake
Ok. If the measurement error analysis in the paper isn't wrong, that means the 1 second in 100 million years isn't wrong. Since that corresponds to an error rate of about 3 * 10 ^ -16, which was derived within the month, — fdrake
Yes, time is arbitrary. Change isn't. That is the difference. — Harry Hindu
I'm thinking it just means that our language can be confusing. We're not accustomed to tense-less chat. So, the block universe = what was, what is, and what may yet come to be. — jorndoe
I don't get the fuss over McTaggert's A and B series. They simply are not incommensurable. Any A-series event can be made a B-series event simply by indexing it. — Banno
Indeed, it doesn't require infinite space. It (a type 1 world, not a duplicate) does at least require an expanding universe, else eventually light would have time to cross the distance. The dup-Earth requires space big enough to form duplicates of something, which could in theory be close enough to be visible from here once light had time to make the trip. That is more probable than what you show below where it by chance just never happens. — noAxioms
They're not separate universes (especially types 1 and 3), just separate worlds in this universe. For type 1, the distant Earth is a true duplicate. The space is infinite, but the possible states in a finite space (say that of Earth) are not, so each state much eventually be duplicated given enough distance. — noAxioms
For those of us who prefer not to sit through a video and who have only a nodding acquaintance with the topic, can you please remind us what a level 3 multiverse is? — fishfry
On the contrary, it seems that in the past few years it's becoming time to stop taking physics seriously. Theories that can not be experimentally verified or refuted are not science. — fishfry
Models say otherwise. For the distance to be finite, there would need to be an edge where there is stuff only on one side, and not uniform as we see it. This is true of a subjective model (one with a frame and a 'current event'), but not of any objective view. Other-worlds is necessarily a description from the outside. — noAxioms
My problem with the existence of a law that demonstrates the regularity of a periodic process is that time, space, and other physical quantities are more fundamental than any law of nature. First comes measurement, whether time, mass, volume, distance, etc., and only then can relationships between these quantities can be seen. — TheMadFool
My physics isn't that good but look at the wikipedia article on the pendulum. The period, supposed to be regular, T = 2pi[(L/g)^0.5] where L = length of the pendulum and g is acceleration due to gravity. As you can see before we can derive this law, we need to know T, L and g. In other words, we already need a clock to measure time (T). How do we know that that clock is keeping accurate time? — TheMadFool
Regularity is critical in all measurements. Consider a student's ruler. If the centimeter markings are spaced differently (the should be spaced the exact same length) then the ruler is "broken". Similarly, if the seconds ticked off by a clock are of different "lengths" then time measurement would be pointless. — TheMadFool
The physical process has to be regular. In my OP I mentioned how this is ''less'' of a problem with other quantities like length, mass, volume because we have a standard whose state has been specified. With time it's different because we can never be sure of the regularity of a time piece. We can't be 100% certain that one period of a cesium atom takes the same time as the next. — TheMadFool
How do we know that? My watch's error can be detected by an atomic clock. How do we detect the error of an atomic clock? How do we know the ''1 second of error in 100 million years''? — TheMadFool
If I bring home six beers and put them in the fridge, and I see my son take three, — Wayfarer
Yes, necessarily so, because if you don't understand everything, you can't know that everything is understandable. — ernestm
Mind your temper. — Wayfarer
So, if reality is perfectly comprehensible, then surely you must understand everything, mustn't you? Doesn't the first entail the second? — Wayfarer
You were the one who said you understand everything, — ernestm
and as an axiomatic system is consistent only if incomplete, according to the best of current thought on the topic, you must have a solution to it we don't know — ernestm
So I request your paper on it a second time, and excuse me but I have less entertaining things to do. — ernestm
That's your second problem. You didn't understand the grammar of one of my posts either. rofl. — ernestm
I look forward to your disproof of Gödel's second incompleteness theorem. Please do send me the link to your paper ) — ernestm
According to you, I can't know any no more than you do, because you understand everything perfectly. So whatever I say you will say is wrong, probably including this statement. — ernestm
well, that depends how much of reality you want to comprehend, doesn't it. — ernestm
Although we can improve our comprehension by effort, reality is ultimately beyond perfect comprehension. — ernestm
No, it means that it is irrelevant within mathematics whether its strictly hypothetical models represent anything that really exists. In other words, a non-dimensional point does not necessarily have to represent something that is actually non-dimensional. — aletheist
Dualism is nothing at all to do with the functionality of models of the material world. It is about how the abstractions we apply to our perception of material states and events might themselves be independent of material reality. — ernestm
I said nothing at all about quarks, leptons, bosons, or the Standard Model. My claim is strictly about mathematics. — aletheist
No, we utilize non-dimensional points (and other mathematical constructions) as strictly hypothetical objects, and recognize that they do not have real existence. — aletheist