So how would the conscious, free will act move one particular object independently of the other objects? It cannot be by means of the wave perturbations which you describe, because these are not independent. It's easy to make the claim that Bergson's Elan Vital solves this problem, but until you explain how one object (a living being) moves itself independently of all the surrounding objects, your description of an ocean with waves remains incompatible with this reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
You don't think that there is evidence that the area of your field of vision is made up of separate objects, separate parts? — Metaphysician Undercover
This is where you stray from observed empirical reality. Empirically proven principles demonstrate that anything which is divisible is such because it consists of parts. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you think that you can sense a feeling of time when you are unconscious? I don't think so. Do you think you sense a feeling of time when you are dreaming? — Metaphysician Undercover
There is always substance though, a surface which we mark, or a ruler, or some such thing. So we measure space by referring to material substance, but we can only go so small with material substance, that is the point. — Metaphysician Undercover
I do not believe that we get a sense of time simply from existing. — Metaphysician Undercover
I see how this makes sense with space, but I don't think it makes sense with time. With space it only makes sense to claim that there is a half distance if we can actually identify the real existence of that half distance, to say that the object travels that distance. So if we start with 100m we can mark this, and see that the object travels that spatial unity. We can mark a 50m unit, a 25m unit, and so on, and see the object travel these units. Inevitably there will be a point where we can no longer mark the distance, or observe the object travel it. So it doesn't make sense to speak of space in terms of divisibility like that.
Time however is different. Time is a concept derived from the motions of objects. It relates one motion to another. Because of this, it is not the property of any particular motion. This abstractness provides that it must be inherently divisible in order that we may apply it to ever faster and ever shorter duration of motion. So in the case of time I think we must always allow that even in the shortest identified time period, there is still a possible shorter time period, to provide us the capacity to identify even faster and shorter motions, in the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
As above, I don't get this. You do travel half the way before you reach the end. That's just a fact that's entailed by continuous motion. — Michael
We do not have to treat every halfway point as a discrete step in the motion from the start of that 100-m line to its end. We can traverse the one full interval (100 m) without individually traversing infinitely many half intervals (50 m, 25 m, 12.5 m, etc.). — aletheist
Sure there is. If the object is to travel 10 meters then it passes the half-way point after 5 meters. And this is true even if we're not measuring it. — Michael
It might be indivisible at a certain scale, but it's not indivisible at every scale — Michael
Even if we are to assume an operation which requires a zero duration of time, — Metaphysician Undercover
We know that the present is real because of the radical difference between future and past — Metaphysician Undercover
Ever since Newton's laws, the discipline of physics has taken the continuity of physical existence for granted, it is a given. As such, continuity is apprehended as a necessity. It underlies the laws of physics. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is trivially true that no representation reproduces its object in every respect, and the purpose of musical notes - and mathematical symbols/equations - is obviously not to represent "the experience itself." — aletheist
What I think is that it is necessary to assume that the entire physical world is reborn, comes into existence anew, at each moment in time, and this is discrete existence. But as I said, the soul provides continuity, so it is not the case that we are constantly dying and being reborn, the soul is immaterial and not part of this discrete material existence. So as living souls, continuity is our actual experience. But when we deny dualism we suffer from the illusion that the physical world is continuous as well as our own existence as living beings. — Metaphysician Undercover
The issue is not defining properties independent of a person or group of people, it is things having properties independent of what any person or group of people thinks about it — aletheist
I am inclined to subscribe to how Peirce addressed this.
'Real' is a word invented in the 13th century to signify having Properties, i.e. characters sufficing to identify their subject, and possessing these whether they be anywise attributed to it by any single man or group of men, or not. Thus, the substance of a dream is not Real, since it was such as it was, merely in that a dreamer so dreamed it; but the fact of the dream is Real, if it was dreamed; since if so, its date, the name of the dreamer, etc. make up a set of circumstances sufficient to distinguish it from all other events; and these belong to it, i.e. would be true if predicated of it, whether A, B, or C Actually ascertains them or not. The 'Actual' is that which is met with in the past, present, or future. — aletheist
This is questionable though. We can understand time as discrete units, or we can understand time as a continuity. We can also understand it as some kind of composition of both. What if real time, which we are experiencing, consists of discrete units, and it is just the brain and living systems which are creating the illusion of continuity? I tend to think that the only real continuity is the existence of the soul itself, and the soul, during the act of experiencing, renders the appearance of time as continuous, to make it compatible with its own existence, and therefore intelligible to the lower level living systems. Now, as highly developed life forms, we have developed mathematics, which will allow us to understand the true nature of time, as discrete, but we must get beyond the way that time is presented to us by our lower level living systems, (i.e, that intuitive impression of time) to be able to understand time mathematically. — Metaphysician Undercover