Comments

  • What's it all made of?
    All the current gaps and contradictions in our understanding - the origin of the universe, quantum mechanics, abiogenesis, consciousness, the question of ‘God’ - all seem to dissolve for me in light of the interaction of potentiality as the underlying ‘substance’ of the universe, the fundamental ground of all being.Possibility

    Well put; I'll third that notion.

    Beyond Local Reality
    Time, space, stuff, change, and form are real-ized from
    Fundamental Possibility,
    Becoming the penultimate reality,
    One possible from the probabilities.

    Quantum Superposition is Real
    Our reality comes not from nothing,
    But exists always as possibility,
    One that amounts to something workable,
    Among all in superposition.

    The First Impossibility
    No form of a penultimate realness
    Could exist alone before the rest, since
    Everything is quantum-known-all-at-once;
    For what could make the choice among many?

    The Second Impossibility
    Nor comes it from an absolute nothing,
    Since there can be no such ‘thing’ at all,
    So, since either way is impossible,
    Fundamental Possibility IS.

    The Unbelievable Truth
    This ultimate basis of reality,
    Though not much like our local reality,
    Is hinted at by quantum physics—
    It forms reality real as can be!

    The Verifiable Truth
    So how else could it be, for particles
    Do appear and disappear from nowhere,
    Going from here to there, with no between,
    Manifesting from no-where to now-here.
  • What's it all made of?
    Now measure out some kg m2 s**−2, and there you have it.
  • What's it all made of?
    What's any energy, regardless of perspective, made of?Razorback kitten

    It's made of Mass, Length squared, and Time negative squared.
  • What is Mind? What is Matter? Is idealism vs. materialism a confusion?
    There are many first-person accounts of people having near-death experiences, even after no perceivable brain activity.Noah Te Stroete

    It's still happening in them.

    NDE tunnels of light and such can be explained by neurology, and OBE’s by a condition called sleep paralysis. They can also be induced, resulting in full blown episodes. Neither, then, are proof of a beyond, but of an altered brain state.

    It is also the case that people of different religions see different religious figures during NDE’s, an indication that the phenomenon occurs within the mind, not without.

    OBE’s are easily induced by drugs. The fact that there are receptor sites in the brain for such artificially produced chemicals means that there are naturally produced chemical in the brain that, under certain circumstances (the stress of an trauma or an accident, for example), can induce any or all of the experiences typically associated with an NDE or OBE. They are then nothing more than wild trips induced by the trauma of almost dying. Lack of oxygen also produces increased activity though disinhibition—mental modes that give rise to consciousness.

    What about the experience of a tunnel in an NDE? Well, the visual cortex is on the back of the brain where information from the retina is processed. Lack of oxygen, plus drugs generated, can interfere with the normal rate of firing by nerve cells in this area. When this occurs ‘stripes’ of neuronal activity move across the visual cortex, which is interpreted by the brain as concentric rings or spirals. These spirals may be ‘seen’ as a tunnel.

    We normally only see clearly only at about the size of a deck of cards held at arm’s length (Try looking just a little away and the clarity goes way down)—this is the center of the tunnel which is caused by neuronal stripes. I am not really dying to go down the tunnel…
  • What is Mind? What is Matter? Is idealism vs. materialism a confusion?
    What a battle!

    Consciousness/qualia is of the brain as a process therein because
    1. It reflects what the brain has just come up with from its analysis.
    2. It can go away in a faint, with a blow to the head, anesthesia, or get foggy from drugs.
  • The world may be a place for non-substantial things that appear substantial nevertheless
    if so, what stops the system from going back to a null-and-void state,god must be atheist

    Heck if I know! Stephen Hawking came up with the zero-sum example, although Pascual Jordan had it long ago, too.

    One time I confided some of my recent suffering to the Great Lama of the East, who has a temple here nearby. I have a whole story of it, but I'll just put the end, unless you want it all.

    He said not to worry about the suffering, for it isn't real…

    I said, “Yes, I’ve heard that this world isn’t really real, that we shouldn’t worry about life’s tribulations.”

    He replied, “That’s what we believe. Tell me, does that work?”

    “Well, um, does not life’s existence look, seem, and act just the way it would, in every detail, as if it were really real?”

    “Yes, indeed. Exactly. That’s what they say makes for the great illusion.”

    “I hate to say this, Great Lama, but an implementation difference that makes no difference (as thee messenger) is no difference (in the message).”

    “I think you’re onto something.”
  • The world may be a place for non-substantial things that appear substantial nevertheless
    But... but... but what if NOBODY did this? After all, in a universe in which nothing is, there is nobody either... to do things.god must be atheist

    Nobody Nowhere Nowhat Nowhen did it.

    The negative potential energy of gravity exactly matches and cancels out the positive kinetic energy of stuff.
  • The world may be a place for non-substantial things that appear substantial nevertheless
    In other words, we live in a non-material universe,where substance does not exist,but things appear as if things were made of substance.god must be atheist

    What a great hoax is being put over on us! We put a picture of some cheese in a mousetrap and catch a picture of a mouse. Our senses don't really take anything in, but this is faked to fool us. Just wait until I catch the guy who did this!
  • Important Unknowns
    There is no explanation of how anything in the brain gives rise to or could give rise to mental phenomena without leaving a large explanatory gap.Andrew4Handel

    And yet it does. It's OK to accept a truth instead of a proof when the proof involves the first person realm, the only place where quailia are; tough to get in there.
  • What's it all made of?
    No research went into the process of thinking up my post.god must be atheist

    My pleasure to meet with a completely honest person, but the thought came from your brain and so there was perhaps some kind of inadvertent 'research' prompting the post.

    What is matter made of? I think a better question is, "is matter made of anything?"god must be atheist

    Matter appears to be mostly made of energy, as some have indicated here. Energy is equivalent to mass, and mass is approximately matter, I guess. Some answer 'information', having it to be equivalent to energy.

    creationistsgod must be atheist

    They could still say that 'God did it', this not being an answer, really, but rather an even larger question to ponder.
  • Atheist Take on Reincarnation and Karma
    You never remain as 'you', even for an instant, nor does any other state ever remain the same, for all is in continuous transition, never remaining in any particular state. The one real thing is that which underlies these temporary happenings/events, and it, strangely to us, perhaps, ever remains the same, as the only permanent thing.
  • The basics of free will
    no matter how you define it, either you have it or you do not and arguing settles not the issue.Arne

    We defined it, recently, here, for example, that the will makes choices, and, thus, so defined, we have free will. 'Defining' is the key to have the words 'free will' mean something, among other possible meanings. (Aside from coercion, as always.)

    it is philosophy as industry and you are only proving my point in that regard.Arne

    Philosophy, leading to science investigation, is not useless, but can sometimes show high probability findings.

    Others are often after something deeper, and so define 'free will' to mean that the result of the will doesn't have to be the same if the exact same situation could be run again—that some measure of variety is inherent, even if this is only due to something truly 'random'. 'Random' disrupts the will's natural flow and so it's seldom touted as any kind of plus toward free will, it being like an anti-will harm.

    Aside from 'random', the 'fixed will' proponents have a good case, in that the will does its job exactly according to what it has in it, called 'determined', or at least to the best of its resolution. The black and white only opposite, then, to 'determined' is 'undetermined', which is no will at all.

    Since indeterminate states other than 'random' can't even be defined, much less shown, a highly probable conclusion obtains for this second definition, which is that the two hundred trillion brain neuron connections do as they must.

    This fixed will would be but of the instant of the decision, it continually growing from new information, thus, one might decide today what wouldn't have been decided yesterday, or even a few minutes ago. Minds can change.

    In either case, of free versus fixed, the will widens and thus can make better choices, presuming that learning can happen.

    Another philosophical item of interest stemming from this area is that of whether consciousness is an independent, second will, with some similar but alternate mechanism to the brain. Well, it doesn't have to duplicate anything like the brain, for it already has the brain behind it, plus consciousness would be part of the brain, too, reflecting what the brain just came up with, albeit in its own unique language.

    Consciousness needs to be something useful to the brain, such as a global result that other brain areas can get to and then comment on, now or later, and perhaps the shorthand notation of qualia is necessary, but we are only in our infancy of finding such things out. Better to look into things than to quit because they might never get resolved.

    Even finding that consciousness itself doesn't decide anything would shock the world to its foundations, as would fixed will, too. The good part would be to then have more compassion for those who are really stuck

    The courts now seem to lean toward protecting society over punishing the offender.
  • The basics of free will
    I have and can make a choice.Terrapin Station

    Me, too. This is my brain's will 'speaking' here and always, for thoughts ever arise therein.

    The part of the brain that is called the 'will' comes up with a result, after 300-500 or so milliseconds of subconscious analysis, probably via neural connections, of bio, electric, and chemical, of my repertoire.

    It may be sometimes that the result is to ruminate further or to put it all aside and move on to something else. This all seems rather instant, but science has informed of what would not otherwise be known about what underlies and the time it takes. The conscious quaila sequentially follow, when meant to.

    It is probably that quaila are the brain's own invented internal language, at least closer to that endpoint. Qualia, too, take a bit of time to build and apply unity to, as will as to stitch them seamlessly to the previous. Perhaps they get remembered as a whole and get fed back into memory as a kind of short cut.

    These choices appear to aid my survival through their consistency, generally, when one is not a reckless risk taker, nuts, stupid, etc.

    I can't say a lot for sure, though, as the brain, for even I am not privy to my own sub-conscious going-on, although sometime I get an inkling. Other times the thoughts seem to come out of the blue. I have also learned not to take my thoughts as gospel just because I thought of them, but with a grain of salt, meaning, I guess, like count to ten first, reflecting. Other, impulsive types may not be so lucky, missing out on that space, but that's life.

    Now, after many more milliseconds signal whirling, I'm not even so sure if I should post all this. I await the choice; oh, here it is: post!
  • The basics of free will
    Awareness is a decision that is made before we ‘see an apple’. A decision is made to be aware of sense data - to seek information from our senses - and then to connect that sense data to related information in the brain that we find points to there being ‘an apple’ in that sense data. The collaboration occurs when another decision is made to integrate these related sources of information into the thought of ‘seeing an apple’.Possibility

    I suppose this sums up a bit proto-man to human development, 'awareness' having now become automatic, along with the other two items. Or maybe it was the other way around, per Damasio, with awareness and then consciousness coming to mind.

    We can train ourselves to be more aware, such as would the intelligence operative and the ninja or by following a cat around in the dark.
  • What's it all made of?
    My fun video on Energy:

  • What's it all made of?
    Oh, a particle is a long event happening.Razorback kitten

    Especially protons.

    it might decay with a half-life of about 10**32 years — Gooooooggle
  • What's it all made of?
    I want to hear your idea of what could possibly be at the centre of stuff?Razorback kitten

    'Stuff' would mostly be energy/interactions going 'round, although I lean toward calling 'stuff' to be happenings/events, with apparently stable 'stuff' being just long events.

    But you are still made of nothing so how on earth can I take you seriously?Razorback kitten

    We are so temporary that we are changing zillions of times a second, since the All, whether eternal or of 'Nothing', is continuously transitioning and so thus is never anything in particular, but leaving the events/happenings to be to us what is, with things not.

    Both Everything, as a Library of Babel, and Nothing, as an empty hut, tell us zip, neither of them having any information content. The only benefit of existence would seem to be experience; so, drink of it..

    The Eternal Return?

    Behind the Veil, being that which e’er thrives,
    The Eternal IS has ever been alive,
    For that which hath no onset cannot die,
    Nor a point from which to design its Why.

    Some time it needed to learn Everything for,
    And now well knows how these bubbles to pour,
    Of existence, in some like universe,
    As those that wrote your poem and mine, every verse.

    So, as thus, thou lives on yester’s credit line
    In nowhere’s midst, now in this life of thine,
    As of its bowl your cup of brew was mixed
    Into the state of being that’s called “mine”.

    Yet worry you that this Cosmos is the last,
    That the likes of us will become the past,
    Space wondering whither whence we went
    After the last of us her life has spent?

    The Eternal Saki has thus formed
    Trillions of baubles like ours, and will form,
    Forevermore—the comings and passings
    Of which it ever emits to immerse
    Of those universal bubbles blown and burst.

    So fear not that a debit close your
    Account and mine, knowing the like no more;
    The Eternal Cycle from its pot has pour’d
    Zillions of bubbles like ours, and will pour.

    When You and I behind the cloak are past
    But the long while the next universe shall last,
    Which of one’s approach and departure the All grasps
    As might the sea’s self heed a pebble cast.
  • What's it all made of?
    until something comes alongRazorback kitten

    Well, something has come along and it exists, so, then, there has to be a way for it to be.

    Not that 'Nothing' can have an existence, but if there could be a lack of anything as an absolute 'Nothing' then 'it' would have no properties and 'it' would then still be the case, but 'it' ain't, and I am quite wrong to even refer to it herein, for 'it' cannot even be meant.

    Still, we need to eventually account for the apparent zero-sum balance of opposites in nature. For example, the potential negative energy of gravity matches that of the positive kinetic energy of 'stuff', which is very curious.

    Also, the net electric charge of the universe appears to be zero. Matter and anti-matter annihilate, but photons are the result, not 'Nothing'. Some propose that photons are a plus and a minus peacefully amounting somehow to a neutral charge without blowing up.

    QM has virtual particles fluctuating in and out of existence.

    There is also the finding from QM by Anton Zeilinger to several sigma that "randomness is the bedrock of reality", meaning perhaps that there can be outputs with inputs,

    A 'null physics' theory has it that the Totality is a 'Nothing' nonexistence externally, while, internally, it still also sums to nothing. Since our three dimensions must be additive, then it can only be the fourth that accomplishes the full nullification, which, in the theory, if I remember, is electric charge.

    So, we are ever looking into existence to get more clues like the above, which favor your case, somewhat, but ever add to it some kind of potential/way, making the 'Nothing' no longer a 'Nothing', as if the something-like potential/way is mandatory, and thus some timeless eternal, which state we ever seem to get forced back to.

    What else does the known existence suggest or tell us? Anybody?

    For the timeless eternal notion, there is that: due to the impossibility of a total 'Nothing' that existence has no alternative and so there can be no opposite to being, leaving something basic as what has to be, plus that this then necessarily must be everything, not just some, since eternal stuff doesn't arrive, but just already 'IS', and everywhere, since there couldn't even be little spacers of 'nothingness' in the fabric of the All. Sounds like covariant quantum fields.

    Let's go have a drink at the Madhouse Tavern in the middle of no-where, us being now-here to do so.
  • What's it all made of?
    Nope. Maybe 2% stuff, 98% not stufftim wood

    Yes, good video. Lincoln posts on the science and philosophy chat forum sometimes.
  • What's it all made of?
    I'm open to a better suggestion. But I've been open to a better idea for a while. A may well of gone mad.Razorback kitten

    You are facing a paradox about the base Existence, like we all do; yet, we can be assured that there are no true paradoxes, since there is existence, even with humongous and near unimaginable amounts of stuff/energy seemingly so easy to come by.

    On the one hand, there doesn't seem to be anything to make existence out of; hence your conclusion of from 'Nothing', but really your 'Nothing' so far is but a near 'Nothing', for you introduce a capability and possibility (as something) to make our existence of stuff.

    If truly there was/is a lack of anything, then how could anything make itself?

    On the other hand, which is only that there is an eternal something, then it would be that it is here without it ever having been made!

    Time to go mad? Don't go yet, for, right here, we have the answer to All, as either from Nothing or as eternal. Astounding! We have surrounded the TOE and have caged it in! Good progress!

    More later.
  • What's it all made of?
    Space is the extension of matter and the extensional relations of matter.Terrapin Station

    Thus leaving no independent 'space' that is additional beside the span of the relations.
  • Important Unknowns
    a Universe from Nothing like Lawrence Krauss.Andrew4Handel

    Um, that was, unfortunately for good communication, referring to the physicist's nothing that isn't nothing; the zero-point field still has energy.
  • What's it all made of?
    2. infinite regression you can reduce matter to other constituents and also these to other constituents etc ad infinitum.MathematicalPhysicist

    I don't see how an effect could ever surface.
  • What's it all made of?
    So many bands of empty space at different frequencies,Razorback kitten

    You sure have a lot of not nothingness here.
  • The basics of free will
    Either you have free will or you do notArne

    I'll try to zero in on what 'free will' is free to do or what it is free of, since many don't define it, leaving it as some stand-alone phrase not anchored.

    For some, it is the ability for the will to operate normally when not forced, this meaning when the will is not coerced. Determinism is not addressed. The depth of coercion, such as (usually) having to stay out of lightning storms and heat waves isn't addressed. That's the end of that one, and so to be clear and not misunderstood, they could declare something like "The uncoerced will is able to operate and thus express itself completely."

    I don't think anyone will claim that there is no will or that it can't operate normally when not forced. So, no big revelation here, but just a statement of the obvious that is so trivial that it seems to bee not what is sought by many.

    The compatibilists say the same except that they admit determinism. More on that later.

    The libertarians, also admitting determinism, mostly, have it that since such as QM shows 'randomness', which mostly cancels out, that some of the 'randomness' might make it into the will's decision-making process, disrupting it, causing an outcome which wouldn't normally happen. However, this harms the will and so it's tough to see how it helps 'free will', for then some decisions might be as 'air-headed', this being not really any help, although they say it can promote variety. Their consolation is that they may have showed that events could have been different if the universe were to be rerun.

    We can't rerun the universe. What it already did on its actual run is what it did, this actuality seeming to trump the 'what if' of some fantasy world game situation situation such as 'What if Hitler had developed the A-bomb'.

    The 'free' of 'free will' to some might mean that the will is not determined, that determinism in not inherent in its analysis for decisions, that it is somehow undetermined, which doesn't sound useful, but they would have to show something non-libertarian to have a 'free will' that is not a 'fixed will' that still grants us consistency to act as ourselves as we have come to be up to that moment.

    If there is another definition of 'free-will', the advocates would have to define it so that we could better size it up.

    Of course, we do research first, if luckily it is one of the qualities of our will to seek information and be able to better analyze from both sides. Then our wills gain a wider range and can choose better, even choosing differently later on, changing one's mind. The will usually doesn't freeze into one state, but I appreciate that it may well get stuck for some, with a general, not mental, learning disability, which I leave for cognitive behavioralists to figure out.
  • What's it all made of?
    How about NOTHINGness, just empty space. Interacting with other empty space, until SOMETHING is happening out of nothing. I believe you really can make something out of nothing.Razorback kitten

    You have Newton's absolute space, whose only quantity would seem to be volume. Einstein replaced this notion with the gravitational field, that is, space-time.

    Note that 'Nothing' has no existence, no properties; 'it' doesn't even have an 'it' (a what), an arena (a where), a time (a when), etc., so it is not.
  • What is the difference between God and the Theory of Everything?
    'God's realm has shrunk to being constrained to do only the same as what would naturally happen.
  • What's it all made of?
    sea of fluctuating empty spaceRazorback kitten

    This is the quantum foam, ever jittering, for some reason like that QM can never be definite, as mostly noise, items coming and going in a kind of sub-time/pre-time, sub-space/pre-space, sub-stuff/pre-stuff mode since they don't endure; but then, somehow, something lasts for more than an instant, even for a bit, and some chain reaction occurs, and then there are more happenings unto some more…
  • Important Unknowns
    Also I can't pretend as if I knowAndrew4Handel

    Yes, this is a problem for many, as either atheists or theists. To say for sure that 'God' is or is not is misleading at best and dishonest at worst, and they can easily be called on it. Preaching 'maybes' as 'maybes', of course greatly diminishes the impact the saying of getting followers for what is believed in. While we presume that many can see through this dodge, there may be unsuspecting adults or children listening to the 'maybes' touted as if they were truth and fact.

    Dawkings is honest, surmising a one in a quadrillion chance for there to be 'God'; he goes by probability, which is all we can do if we want to choose, which often we must, such as to go or not to church. Tough to sit on a fence, but it seems that's what has to be done, as agnostic.
  • A Proof for the Existence of God
    sandwichesDfpolis

    Perhaps you missed my post; from my view it is at the end of the previous page.
  • What's it all made of?
    E=mc²Razorback kitten

    'm' is for mass, but it approximates matter. 'e' is a heck of a lot of energy.

    'Energy' was originally about how much work could be done; we aren't getting too far here as to what energy is, at heart. I would have to go with Rovelli's covariant quantum fields as being the All of what's fundamental, but what are fields?

    An image of waves comes to mind, but what are waves, other than a field?

    Meanwhile, note that spacetime is exactly Einstein's gravitational field.

    Waves? They must seemingly the the simplest form, which preserves the fundamental arts, that of it having no further parts. Looks like the composite and the complex must always be 'above'/beyond.

    This didn't say what waves really are yet. Further, waves are ubiquitous in nature, which adds to our guess about them being so.

    The waves are something; that doesn't tell us much new about wha they're made of.

    Some think that there are waves of something and an anti-something, as like matter versus anti-matter. Their frequency would give rise to what we think of as their energy. Their amplitude would be positive and negative charge. Their extension would give rise to dimension.

    Some go further, that they can make a 'Big Bang', if there are so many that they have to explode due to infinite density not being able to be, like any infinity can't, if they get compressed du to their weight or if they swirl inward until there's no inward left. Of course, /I am somewhat presuming through all this.

    The explosion, eventually, spews out "centers of oscillation", protons being more or less the waves and the electrons being the wave envelopes.

    There are only three main stable particles in free space (and their anti-particles), this suggesting that there are only these limited number of ways to make them. Note that neutron's decay in free space within 12 minutes, leaving us only the proton, the electron and the photon, this also bolstering the wave symmetry idea, as we will see.

    It appears, then, that there can be only two positively charged matter particles, the proton(+) and the electron(-), and only one energy particle, which must have a neutral charge, it being its own anti-particles, it possible being the electron and the positron (that it can be broken into) somehow living in peace because of something like that they are 180 degrees out of phase for some reason.

    This curious symmetry about the three stable particles calls out to us very Loudly!

    But what are waves made of? I have to wave good-bye now.
  • The basics of free will
    FREE WILL

    Given that I cannot choose to consciously exist in this situation:

    I choose to be aware
    I choose to connect
    I choose to collaborate
    Possibility

    OK, moving onto the OP, let us take the list as assertions, ignoring that it was said, that "Given that I cannot choose to consciously exist in this situation:", which meant that there was no choosing of what's in the list.

    Awareness is inherent in the brain/will, a part of its nature. The will may or may not attend much further to what it is aware of, although it is difficult not to; we see an apple and then think what to do with a bit.

    I have to guess at 'connect', but preclude it being with people since that is covered in the next item. Consciousness connects in unity the result of the will/brain doings, and also connects it seamlessly to what it had previously. This would seem to be automatic.

    'Collaborate' seems optional, but again I have nothing further to go on about its meaning here.
  • The basics of free will
    'Free will' sounds like a good thing to have, yet references to it without definition are meaningless.

    One, trivial, but common definition is that the will is free/able to operate normally in the absence of. coercion. Let us move past this, unto the big fuss, which is more about that we don't like being automatons/robots, albeit that the resultant consistency aiding our survival is also desired. This stance creates conflict! But then comes the big thud of the other shoes dropping (the alternatives) that horrify us even more..

    Time to gather information rather than just stating things out of thin air and starting more threads.

    More later.

    Notes:
    The more range/inputs (information) in the will, the better its output.
    Positing additional inputs to the brain is fine, such as others brain waves, but they're just another input.
    Brain analysis and its result takes time, and thus precedes consciousness.
    'Random' happenings don't help the will; they harm it.
    Consistency of the will is useful for survival, in the good sense.
    The will cannot be free of the will.
    There is no law that says that life has to be meaningful and so the will cannot be fixed to the instant.
    The will is dynamic. Through learning and experience, new, better, fixed wills can arrive.
  • The basics of free will
    Guys, many of us know that believing in something doesn't necessarily make it true and that still acting as if it were true is not very honest. Although there are those who are unwilling or unable to learn and therefore aren't reachable (doomed to fixed ideas), not everyone has that kind of learning disability.
  • The basics of free will
    what does that even mean?Arne

    It appears to read that the states in the list are automatic happenings and thus unavoidable.
  • The basics of free will
    If they say they did, then they don’t have a case.Wayfarer

    The fixed will is that of the instant, 'voting' as it has become up to then; however, the fixed will is dynamic—it can change to a new and different fixed will via learning/experience, plus, truth can be discovered, regardless.

    FREE WILLPossibility

    The will can't be free of itself, so isn't the will just the will? If it is only to be free of coercion, that is trivial. If it is then the the will is able to operate, then that, too, is no great shakes.
  • The Universe Cannot Have Existed ‘Forever’
    No, this is when viewed from a 5D perspective - when we do the maths and relate events outside of our own 4D perspective (ie. our physical existence).Possibility

    Here is a probably meaningless dimensional analysis equation if 'c' is a ratio:

    (externally, 4D block) as dddd / ('c' light speed) as d/t = (internally, space-time) as dddt
  • The Universe Cannot Have Existed ‘Forever’
    Are you suggesting here that two discrete events cannot relate to each other? That if we accept that all is process, then there is no relata?Possibility

    No, a process is a good idea. I got it from my maybe garbled notes and perhaps 'processism' shouldn't be there or should have been something else. I should have left the whole thing out since I was already questioning it upon rereading it.
  • The Universe Cannot Have Existed ‘Forever’
    Fields making up empty space? Sounds like substantivalismDevans99

    Not substantivalism, but relationalism, because there's no empty space; 'space' doesn't exist in addition to something else. Space-time literally is Einstein's gravitational field. 'Space' is the span of relations.

    'Space' was always a problem, in that it had to be impossibly infinite in whatever quantity it had ascribed to it, such as it having volume as its only quantity.

    So we need to consider discreetness.Devans99
    Yes, the quantum discreteness demolishes the continuum—which we can add to our impossibles' list. Granularity rules.
  • The Universe Cannot Have Existed ‘Forever’
    - It seems time had a start, maybe the BB. To go from a no time to time situation, would something physical have to change in the universe? Does that suggest time is a physical 'thing'?Devans99

    Time is mostly constituted by us; take music, for example, from my own Rubaiyat:

    Memory’s traces recall the last heard tone;
    Sensation savors what is presently known;
    Imagination anticipates coming sounds;
    The delight is such that none could produce alone.

PoeticUniverse

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