I see it that indirect realism demands the literal exact opposite. An indirect realist would say your visual experience of your house is NOT just your house as it is. That's okay, that's not required for "seeing", it's just a fact — flannel jesus
I've made a point previously in the thread that indirect realists can (and in real life, not in this thread, usually do) use the word "see" in a completely intuitive, conventional way. — flannel jesus
I don't need anybody to jump through hoops to know what I'm saying when I say "I can see my house from here". — flannel jesus
At least on the forum, productive discussions of direct vs indirect realism tend to require pinning down where the disagreement is between disputants. — fdrake
I don't consider it a 'part', no. I don't see perdurantist language in the field, so I don't use it. A part of a 4D object would be a smaller 4D object. — noAxioms
The 3D cross section you describe corresponds to a state of Floyd in presentism. Floyd is in one state at noon, and a different state at 1. None of those states move since each is at but one location ever. But Floyd is still said to move in presentism. — noAxioms
Your argument seems to be equivalant to Floyd not moving because none of his states do. — noAxioms
I will also say that, given a frame of reference to define the hyperplane of simultaneity referred to as 'at noon', then 'Floyd at noon' defines a set of events that comprise a 3D spatially extended region, and that those events are a subset of all the events that are considered to be Floyd.
That's pretty close to the perdurantist wording, but without all the ambiguity and terms with loading meaning. Funny thing is, the statement works under presentism as well, except the specification of the frame wouldn't be necessary. — noAxioms
The noon-part of Floyd doesn't change its temporal or spatial location, like you assume.
There you go again, putting straw man assumptions in my mouth. — noAxioms
The definition of motion is a change in a 3D object's position over time.
And reiterating discriminatory definitions as well. I showed that definition to be false even in presentism (the shadow), and you didn't counter it, but rather came up with irrelevant comments about its causes. — noAxioms
So you've proven what nobody seems to be able to do, which is to falsify eternalism. Kindly detail some empirical falsification test, Love to hear it. — noAxioms
'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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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)
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
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
I assume you're also against the growing block theory of time? — Michael
As you may recall from previous discussions on time, my ontology of time involves a blend of presentism and eternalism (in short, that without presentism there is no 'progression of events', and without eternalism there is no timeline(s) of events). — Luke
I believe that a combination of both views of presentism and eternalism are required to coherently account for time. — Luke
Well, I think any reasonable philosophy needs to take into account the facts as we best understand them. According to General Relativity time is the fourth dimension of spacetime. Talking about "overwriting" the "timeline" is like talking about "overwriting" the "heightline" or the "widthline" or the "lengthline". It seems pretty nonsense.
What does it mean to "overwrite" a direction in space(time)? — Michael
Well, I think any reasonable philosophy needs to take account of the facts. According to General Relativity, time is the fourth dimension of spacetime. — Michael
Talk of "overwriting" the "timeline" is like talking about "overwriting" the "depthline" or the "widthline" or the "heightline". It seems pretty nonsense. — Michael
So, Alice gets to the train tracks and has to stop because the gate comes down.
That's Alice0, yes. She's the original. She's never time traveled, not backwards at least. — noAxioms
By 'second time around' you mean the 2nd writing of those 30 seconds, yes. Alice1 makes it across the tracks. Alice0 is a half km back from the crossing and will get there in 30 seconds, 5 seconds after the gate goes down. — noAxioms
You seem only capable of imagining the traveler, just like Hollywood only follow the protagonist. — noAxioms
Think about the others in the world at noon. Remember that Alice0 is in that world, half a km up the road, who is fretting about how tight her time is to make her appointment. She thinks about little else at the moment. Alice1 makes it across but Alice0 is about to erase Alice1's victory by hitting the button for the very first time in her life, truncating the history where Alice1 made it across. It sort of turns into a Groundhog-Day situation, except in Groundhog Day, the protagonist has memory of all the times through the loop. Alice doesn't. Alice0 has no memory of ever having time traveled. — noAxioms
The time travel event in your scenario does not overwrite the timeline.
It doesn't? You say it does. You said Bob going back to 1990 truncates history back to 1990 so it can be overwritten with older-Bob in it now, which is exactly what Alice0 is doing, except this time younger Alice0 is working the controls, not older Alice1. Are we changing the story again? — noAxioms
None that I know of anyway. Langoliers comes closest. The travelers arrive at a sort of blank future, but stay put at the moment of arrival until the 'present' catches up with them and suddenly everybody appears. It's one of the few stories that really leans on presentism, where the author is very aware of his model and tries to be consistent with it. — noAxioms
No, waiting for a bus takes subjective time, experienced by the waiter. The experience of the traveler is no waiting. The world is simply there when they arrive, sort of like super-fast spaceship and time dilation. I can go forward 11 years in a moment without having to experince waiting, if my ship is fast enough. And SEP apparently designates that as actual time travel, despite my protests. — noAxioms
I don't think many works of fiction explicitly rely on this growing-block model that you have going on here, so concepts like a new history growing simply don't apply. — noAxioms
So you are saying that, in all works of fiction, there is no time travel to a future time which occurs before people have waited for that future time to happen?
The machine has to wait. The people never do, since the experience is instantaneous to them. — noAxioms
I never said either. It happens at the time of the event. It exists in spacetime. All events exists in spacetime, but they don't all happen at any given time since the time of one event may be different than the time of another. — noAxioms
I gave examples of the difference between the words, where substituting one for the other in a sentence would result in a wrong statement. So no, they're not synonymous. — noAxioms
I never said either. It happens at the time of the event. It exists in spacetime. All events exists in spacetime, but they don't all happen at any given time since the time of one event may be different than the time of another. — noAxioms
I defined the preferred moment as "the state that is happening, as opposed to those that have happened or have not yet happened". What's wrong with that?
Yes, that's how a presentist might define the preferred moment. But that moment is not postulated in eternalism. If you want to understand eternalism, don't drag in definitions and premises from an incompatible view. — noAxioms
Does eternalism allow for events to have happened, and for events to have not yet happened, but not for events to happen? Why?
Meaningless due to the implicit references to the present. — noAxioms
Does eternalism allow only for the different ontological states of 'not yet happened' and 'happened'
Both are meaningless. They are both references to the present. How can you not see this? — noAxioms
The Titanic sinks on some 1912 night. That is a statement of something that happens. Relative to the night before, it has not yet sunk, and the night after, it is at the bottom of the ocean. Somewhere between those two events does the sinking 'happen'. It's not much different than presentism except there is no preferred moment that has to somehow glide across that event in order for the event to cycle through the different ontological states of 'happening' and then 'happened'. All events have equal ontology. Besides that, there is very little difference with the standard definition of 'happens'. — noAxioms
Is "before the big bang" part of spacetime?
Not our spacetime. The geometry outside our spacetime is not really known, It isn't know if 'geometry' is the right word for it even. — noAxioms
Also not sure about the first part, that there exist events at each (and every) time. For instance, do there exist events before the big bang? I think not. — noAxioms
The statement "there exist events at each (and every) time" does not require every event to be accounted for, as long as there exists at least one event at each and every time.
First of all, the statement is false since I can think of a time that has no events. — noAxioms
Secondly, I know of no coordinate system that accounts for every event (assigns a value to its coordinates), so the bit about a requirement of all events being accounted for is not there for a coordinate system, but it kind of is there for spacetime. Spacetime is physical. Coordinate systems are abstractions. — noAxioms
The phrase "nothing is happening" is not a meaningful one in an eternalist universe, — noAxioms
There is no 'again'. She's hitting the button for the first and only time, because she's late for a very important appointment (a job interview say) and cannot afford to wait for the slow train. She hits the button the one and only time to go back 30 seconds to before the train gate coming down, and thus proceeds across the crossing to make her appointment. There's was never a repeated hitting of the button. Somebody else (the younger Alice back there) will hit the button for the first and only time, for reasons already explained. — noAxioms
Back to the train tracks, Alice gets there just as the gates go down, but watches a very similar car ahead of here make it across. So she hits the button and goes back 30 seconds. That destroys the 30 seconds. She ends up at the tracks, and in time to scoot across. The world ends 30 seconds later when the car behind here truncates it there. There is no future after that. The universe cannot go on. — noAxioms
At time 12:00:25, the train gates go down. At 12:00:30, Alice gets to the crossing, who's in a hurry and she's driving the DeLorean. She hits the button to go back 30 seconds.
At noon, a DeLorean appears at the tracks and proceeds across. 400 meters back, a DeLorean approaches the crossing.
At time 12:00:25, the train gates go down. At 12:00:30, Alice gets to the crossing. She hits the button to go back 30 seconds. The Alice on the other side of the crossing is truncated out of existence.
At noon a DeLorean appears at the tracks, almost exactly in the same place as the other one that appears there. OK, so there is some sort of resolution of a car appearing at the location of a car already there, so either there is an explosion and the Alices all die (yay for the universe), or one wins and truncates the other out of existence, and the cycle continues. — noAxioms
None, which is why you model, if the machine doing a forward jump doesn't wait for the destination to be written, would match any of the typical fictions.
So either the machine must wait for the destination to be written, or if it doesn't, the machine appears in an unwritten future, which is blank. — noAxioms
Sure you do. Jumping to Y3000 with a machine gets you to Y3000 just like Phillip Fry (who does it via Cryonics, an identical experience). — noAxioms
As I said, the machine has always been a cloning device. Bob goes back to 1990 where he meets another Bob. Two Bobs means one is a clone. Using this technique, you can make as many Bobs as you want, and you can do it quickly, in minutes instead of decades. So getting a clone by going forward is admittedly consistent with your going-back description, even if none of the fictions seem to depict that consistency. Hollywood has developed a rule that you can meet yourself if you go backwards, but not if you go forwards. — noAxioms
No, you said the line is written as if the travel had failed, so F-Bob very much exists in the line to which S-Bob travels. — noAxioms
The timeline that would have existed if there had been no time travel events gets overwritten (from the time machine's arrival date onwards) by a new timeline which includes a time travel event and its effects. — Luke
Why can't the B line just be written from the start since F-Bob and the rest of the A line is doomed before the first moment is written? — noAxioms
If there had been no time travel events then F-Bob wouldn't exist.
No, if there had been no travel event, then S-Bob (the traveling one) doesn't exist. — noAxioms
Yes, as described just above. The machine has to wait 22 years now for two different histories to play out over 11 years each. Weird, but not contradictory. — noAxioms
The machine only disappears if there is a time travel event.
Well, there was a time travel event in line A, but the observers in it have no way to tell. They would have been able to tell in 2035, but their line ends there, so they have no experience that would constitute a falsification test. — noAxioms
Processes are comprised of multiple events, and just like Earth (with spatial extension) can be treated as a point in some calculations, so can a process (a concert say) be treated as a point event so long as our precision is low enough that it doesn't matter. — noAxioms
Since time is one of the dimensions of spacetime, the word 'happens' is meaningful. The event happens at the location in spacetime of that event, which I realize is circular, but that's the nature of a tautology. — noAxioms
What was wrong with my depiction that "while the event is happening, it is cycling through successive ontological states with each successive state being the "preferred" moment," where "the "preferred" moment is the state that is happening, as opposed to those that have happened or have not yet happened."
Besides the explicit reference to a preferred moment? — noAxioms
Does eternalism allow only for the different ontological states of 'not yet happened' and 'happened'
There are no such ontological differences. — noAxioms
I can see how the view might be difficult to learn from that source. — noAxioms
Only the latter statement is true under eternalism, and the paragraph above seems not to clarify which meaning is meant. — noAxioms
Also not sure about the first part, that there exist events at each (and every) time. For instance, do there exist events before the big bang? I think not. Do all events have a time coordinate? I can't think of a single coordinate system that assigns coordinate values to every event that is part of spacetime, so even that isn't true. — noAxioms
.Nothing is happening in an eternalist universe? The sinking of the Titanic happened but was never happening?
The statements as worded are both meaningless under eternalism, so instead of being true or false, both are more 'not even wrong' — noAxioms
As far as I can tell, nothing forces her to keep hitting the button.
She's in a state where she's going to hit the button in 30 seconds. She's enough in that state that she does it. The question is, what's different about the nth time around that she doesn't, given the same initial state? There's not time for chaos theory to do its thing. Events 30 seconds from now are essentially determined, except for this machine appearing not quite in the sight of Alice who's going to hit the button in 30 seconds. — noAxioms
I never said that future events must actually happen before there can be time travel to a future time.
OK, I presume they must. If they've not happened, wouldn't Bob appear in a blank universe, at a time where nothing had yet been written? The machine moves the present to a universe state that is nonexistent, leaving a universe with only Bob and his machine in it. It would make sense (and match all the fictions) if the machine waited for the writing of the target destination before appearing there. — noAxioms
It takes 11 years to write that future state (assuming an 11 year jump. — noAxioms
It also clones Bob. — noAxioms
Sure, from the traveler's viewpoint (the only one you ever consider), it looks like he just appears there, in 2035 with F-Bob sitting there much in the same way that none of the fictions depict. — noAxioms
Why would it leave a copy of Bob behind?
You said that it goes to a "future timeline that would have existed if there had been no time travel events". If there had been no travel events, Bob would still be in the timeline instead of the machine, so aging F-Bob (the one that is not in the machine) is a copy of the not-aging S-Bob in the machine. — noAxioms
The machine disappears. You did not explain why it shouldn't.
It disappearing would not be consistent with a timeline where 'there had been no time travel event'. — noAxioms
The timeline that would have existed if there had been no time travel events gets overwritten (from the time machine'sarrivaldeparture date onwards) by a new timeline which includes a time travel event and its effects. — Luke
It could be argued that, while the event is happening, it is cycling through successive ontological states with each successive state being the "preferred" moment.
No, not under eternalism. There is no preferred moment in it. You know that, yet you persist with comments like that. — noAxioms
You are apparently saying that in order for an event to happen, it must be present.
Your words, not mine. I would never have used the word 'present' (as in not-absent) in that way, in that context. — noAxioms
Since eternalists hold that events exist at all times
No, they don't say that. Each event exists at a specific time, and not at the others. The comment is analogous to saying Paris and London exist in all places, and not distinct ones. — noAxioms
It might be objected that there is something odd about attributing to a non-presentist the claim that Socrates exists now, since there is a sense in which that claim is clearly false. In order to forestall this objection, let us distinguish between two senses of “x exists now”. In one sense, which we can call the temporal location sense, this expression is synonymous with “x is present”. The non-presentist will admit that, in the temporal location sense of “x exists now”, it is true that no non-present objects exist now. But in the other sense of “x exists now”, which we can call the ontological sense, to say that “x exists now” is just to say that x is now in the domain of our most unrestricted quantifiers. Using the ontological sense of “exists”, we can talk about something existing in a perfectly general sense, without presupposing anything about its temporal location. When we attribute to non-presentists the claim that non-present objects like Socrates exist right now, we commit non-presentists only to the claim that these non-present objects exist now in the ontological sense (the one involving the most unrestricted quantifiers). — SEP article on Time
Really, learn the view before you start asserting what it must say. It hurts, the way you're murdering a view with which you obviously don't hold. — noAxioms
My eternalism titanic example comments never say anything 'is happening'. That is a reference to a present that the view denies. — noAxioms
I fail to see how your examples of multiple time travel events end the timeline.
— Luke
I did it with one time travel event, a scenario you seem to refuse to comment on directly except to say you apparently don't get it. — noAxioms
March it does, but in the example I gave, it just paces back and forth. That needs to be resolved I think before we consider multiple machines. — noAxioms
One can shade all the regions below the line. Those are events that exist (history that is written) at a given time on the x axis. One cannot ask what the state of 1990 is (a time on the y axis) because it has multiple states, being written more than once. — noAxioms
I never said that future events must actually happen before there can be time travel to a future time.
— Luke
Neither did I. — noAxioms
Bob is traveling to it, but it must happen first before he can arrive, else he ends up in a blank universe not yet written. It would presumably be subjectively instant to Bob, just like it is backwards. — noAxioms
I don't really want that; it's just how forward time travel makes sense to me.
— Luke
It makes sense to leave a copy of Bob behind? No time-travel fiction portrays it that way. — noAxioms
The typical depiction is that the machine disappears, which results in the writing of history as if the travel had actually happened. If it doesn't happen, the car/machine doesn't disappear. — noAxioms
You said the result would be a bunch of cars all arriving in the same location causing a black hole.
— Luke
That's sort of one outcome depending on the answers to questions I've asked: What happens when multiple travel events target the exact same space and time? In my example, they're all the same travel event, but happening repeatedly in a different sort of loop that causes collisions. There can be an odometer this time, but outside the machine, not inside. — noAxioms
Then comment on the example. Where does my description of it go wrong? All I have is 'I don't get it'. I need to know what part you don't get.
I spelled it out in considerable detail a couple posts ago. No comments on that. — noAxioms
That's not very helpful. I'm asking you what it means.
— Luke
Not sure how to word it differently. The Titanic sinks on some 1912 night. That is a statement of something that happens. The night before it has not yet sunk, and the night after it is at the bottom of the ocean. Somewhere between those two events does the sinking 'happen'. It's not much different than presentism except there is no preferred moment that has to somehow glide across that event in order for the event to cycle through the different ontological states of 'happening' and then 'happened'. All events have equal ontology. Besides that, there is very little difference with the standard definition of 'happens'. — noAxioms
I never said an event "has multiple temporal locations".
— Luke
You said events happen repeatedly. — noAxioms
I said "all events are happening en masse at their respective times."
— Luke
OK. I'm unclear on the distinction between all the events happening at their respective times, and them all happening en masse at their respective times. The latter wording would seem to be opposed to some of the events happening at their respective times, but other not. — noAxioms
They don't happen at all times. Each event has a time coordinate and only happens at that time. — noAxioms
This suggests that there is a "special event which is 'current', which moves along [the] worldline,"
— Luke
Nothing of the sort is suggested. — noAxioms
The Titanic sinks on some 1912 night. That is a statement of something that happens. The night before it has not yet sunk, and the night after it is at the bottom of the ocean. Somewhere between those two events does the sinking 'happen'. — noAxioms
The whole point of the train track exercise is to figure out how to get Alice out of the loop. — noAxioms
It makes little difference post-time travel.
— Luke
It makes no difference in the single-travel-event scenario, and 60 posts into this, multiple events remain out of consideration. — noAxioms
As I said, you seem to order events per the x axis, and I tend to order events along the y axis. I presume you saw my picture. You will note the absence of numbers along the x axis since it was unclear what to put there. One could put Bob's age there, but that would only work if Bob takes part in every time jump ever. — noAxioms
No. You need the 2nd line to order all the different times that a given year appears. — noAxioms
Forwards time travel is just like backwards time travel.
— Luke
It can't be. There is no future, since it needs writing first. The machine would, at minimum, be forced to wait for the destination to come around, holding its occupant in stasis all the while similar to cryonics but without the cold. — noAxioms
The timeline that would have existed if there had been no time travel events gets overwritten (from the time machine's arrival date onwards) by a new timeline which includes a time travel event and its effects.
— Luke
Why would you want that? There seems to be no point. — noAxioms
Are we going to discuss the contradictions that might arise by having Bob (or others) make more than just the one jump? It all works great and intuitive for a single jump, but the differences in the interpretations really comes out when everybody has one.
I also notice that you've dropped the discussion of Alice at the tracks, ending the universe. That was one consequence of the truncate interpretation: a universe that cannot progress. — noAxioms
I know that things don't remain or go in or out of existence under eternalism. That's why I said that an Eternalist would prefer for the overwritten section to remain in existence
— Luke
No, there can be no overwriting or anything. There is no writing at all. There is but the one timeline (or more if you want), but they don't change. Change is something applicable to something contained by time. — noAxioms
I'm aware that the words "happen" and "occur" are usually synonymous, but it's unclear what it means for an event to "happen" or to "occur" on an Eternalist timeline
An event 'happens' at the location of the event. Not sure how else to say it. — noAxioms
Do the terms "happen" and "occur" mean anything other than that the event exists?
— Luke
I think not. — noAxioms
I mean, by calling it an event, an implication is made that the event exists at a point in spacetime, — noAxioms
If Eternalists take "exist" to be synonymous with "happen"
No, that's not true. The length of my table might exist, but it's not something that 'happens'. — noAxioms
Not sure what 'cease to happen' means, but events, by definition, 'happen' somewhere. They would perhaps be said to exist in the spacetime of which they are part. — noAxioms
This implies that, instead of the usual sequential progression of events wherein later events occur after earlier events, on an Eternalist timeline all events are happening en masse at their respective times and each event happens repeatedly.
— Luke
Ouch. No! There is no repeat. They happen once. An event cannot have multiple temporal locations. — noAxioms
Point is, there is still a sequence for the sort of events you're imagining: Titanic sinks before WWII.
What eternalism lacks is the premise of a 'present' moment, objectively separating all events to three ontological states of 'past, present, and future'.. Any reference to the thing not posited is meaningless under eternalism. Hence the lack of tensed verbs, since such verbs carry a reference to the thing not posited. — noAxioms
I am not sure how you distinguish the terms 'happen' from 'begin to happen', but events do happen. A process that has duration (a house fire say) is something that begins to happen, but an event, being a point in spacetime, has no duration. — noAxioms
Like all events on the Eternalist timeline, the sinking of the Titanic in 1912 and humanity's extinction event in 2316 are both always happening
— Luke
No. 'Is happening' is a reference to the present. Please don't make up your own ideas for eternalism. There is no repeat to it. — noAxioms
Travel is something which happens or occurs, and the word "travel" usually means there is something which progresses (in this case, Ted) from one place to another. Yet, you say "there is nothing which 'progresses' at all."
— Luke
Different usage of the same word. Yes, Ted's life is a progression from his early times (conception) to his death. All those events exist. They all happen. They are ordered, so in that sense, there is a progression. There is no special event which is 'current', which moves along his worldline. In that sense of the word, there is no progression. — noAxioms
Not sure what black holes have to do with our timelines. I don't anticipate either of our lines being in a black hole. — noAxioms
Someone could see it disappear, I suppose
— Luke
This seems contradictory. — noAxioms
I said that the timeline gets overwritten, but you've somehow interpreted that (to be the opposite of what I said) as "no overwrite, but just truncation".
— Luke
Overwrite means the time between 1990 and 2024 still existrs, but gets changed as time makes its way across that period. Truncation means it is gone, and the new write is added to the end of existing history, which is at 1990. The two are the same after 2024 is reached again, or until there is another travel event. — noAxioms
You are correct that the pre-time travel period of 1990-2024 "no longer will happen", but only because it already did happen.
— Luke
You have a funny definition of 'did happen'. Those are future events, and if it's 1990, they're not in the past and thus the use of past tense is misleading. — noAxioms
This is what I mean by you referencing two dimensions of time. One is the time I'm talking about, where 1990 comes before 2024, and the other is the time containing the first kind of time. — noAxioms
Along the x axis, the present is at 1990 more than once, and the 2nd 1990 happens after the first 2024, but all of it 'happens' at some point. That corresponds more to no time travel at all, and history isn't deleted at all, but rather the state of the universe is simply reset to a prior state the exception of the contents of the machine which are protected from the overwrite everywhere else. — noAxioms
I think, but am not sure, than when you get in you machine and set the coordinates for some destination, that you select a value on the y axis and not on the x axis, but it isn't really clear. — noAxioms
One cannot fully understand your view unless forward travel is described. Sticking to this one-backward-jump case leaves several open questions. — noAxioms
Although I understand why an Eternalist would prefer for that section of the timeline to remain in existence
— Luke
Things don't 'remain' or 'go in or out of' existence under eternalism. You seem to not understand the view. — noAxioms
Doesn't this imply that nothing ever happens in an Eternalist universe?
— Luke
No. The Titanic sinks in 1912. Humanity goes extinct in 2316. Those are eternalist statements since they contain no references to the present. Events still occur at specifiable times, which is what 'happens' means. — noAxioms
Therefore, there is no such thing as travel?
— Luke
Ted is home at 7AM, Ted is at school at noon. Ted must travel to be at different places at different times. — noAxioms
That opens the door to the paradoxes, but it also allows a time machine to exist uncreated. Your view I think doesn't support that. — noAxioms
The question is unresolved until you clarify how subsequent time travels work,. In particular, what happens to the object at the location where the machine 'appears'? Does it murder the person there? Does it look for a relatively harmles place to appear? What if a million machines all try to go to the same spot? Eventually space will run out for them all, and Earth collapses into a black hole from too many DeLoreans. — noAxioms
This is just a repeat of what was said before, without answering any of the questions. — noAxioms
Bob is born 1985, meets Sue in 2002, married in 2007, and has a daughter Roberta, born in 2010. Bob kills young-Bob in 1990, so what is the experience of Roberta when she gets overwritten? — noAxioms
What is the experience of Sue when she still exists, but has her marriage and all her history overwritten? — noAxioms
Apparently nobody can witness the departure event of the time machine, at least not if it goes backwards. — noAxioms
You've given no clue how it can go forward to some piece of history that has yet to be written. — noAxioms
I have no issue with the word 'truncated'.
— Luke
You balked at that before. — noAxioms
So no overwrite, but just truncation, and a new building onto 1990, not overwriting some alternate future that no longer will happen. — noAxioms
Robert is immediately gone, and never was, and never will be, in the world timeline which is presently at 1990. — noAxioms
The time machine now exists without having been created since its creation has been truncated off. It doesn't exist and never will. — noAxioms
Sure, its creation exists on Bob's line, but most of Bob's line is not part of the universe, but just a memory. — noAxioms
You claimed that the timeline could be permanently truncated. I still don't follow how or why that could be.
— Luke
The train track scenario illustrated that, but it depends on your answers. The truncation interpretation does result in that, yes. Time cannot move forward. The machine has God-like powers and can actually take control of where the present is and put it somewhere else. Any alien with this technology can effortlessly wipe out human existence simply by truncating us off of history. — noAxioms
I'm not suggesting that 1990 and 2024 are both progressing simultaneously. After all, I'm not an Eternalist.
Eternalism suggests no such thing. There is nothing that 'progresses' at all. — noAxioms
...so either there is an explosion and the Alices all die (yay for the universe), or one wins and truncates the other out of existence, and the cycle continues. — noAxioms
I have to admit that there is a solution to the problem that I didn't see before. — noAxioms
So you seem to envision two dimensions of time. — noAxioms
One is Earth coordinate time, as measured with numbers like 1990, moving horizontal to larger numbers, and the other is perpendicular, and moves 'up' with each travel event. — noAxioms
You seem to assert a single physical space that is 'overwritten', which is a lot like a VCR tape, except there are perhaps no spools to rewind since you seem to balk at that word. — noAxioms
So there is the tape which holds the entire history of the universe up to a 'present' where the write-head is writing. It writes up to 2024 say and then Bob goes back to 1990. A write head goes back to 1990 (without erasing, which would be truncation, another word you don't like) and starts overwriting there. — noAxioms
It is unclear if this is a second write head (leaving the 2024 one to continue writing a universe without Bob, or if the history stops there and waits for the write head 34 years prior to catch up. — noAxioms
With this model, Bob goes back, and the history of the creation of the time machine in 2023 still exists, but the writing is going on in the 90's and when it finally gets to 2023, it overwrites the creation of the time machine, leaving a time machine without a creation event in any of history. — noAxioms
So you want to limit the discussion by imposing a single travel event restriction. This would prevent us from exploring the plausibility of the model. Apparently avoiding that exploration is something you want. — noAxioms
I think you used the word 'rewind'. — noAxioms
If that's how it works, then the tape will never reach year 3000 because somebody (not always the same person) keeps rewinding it. — noAxioms
Anyway, if I got things wrong, you need to correct me on how the model actually works because I don't see how the tape can make forward progress if anybody anywhere has the power to rewind it arbitrarily far at any moment. — noAxioms
As for Back to the Future, that movie has holes. It isn't self consistent. — noAxioms
The VCR tape resumes recording at 1985 and progresses no problem. — noAxioms
Unless the time traveller does something catastrophic, then I would imagine that many of the same people will be born
Well, from about 1986 on, the people born will be different ones. That's a very chaotic function. — noAxioms
On that note, do you agree that the time travel event does not occur until 2024, given that the time traveller departs from 2024 to arrive in 1985?
If this new timeline also has a time travel event in 2024, then the rewind happens again. If there is no time travel event there, then no rewind takes place then. That's why I came up with the 30 second train-track example, where the subsequent time travel decision is very likely. Over 40 years, it is very unlikely that events will turn out identically, especially if Bob goes back to 1985 explicitly to prevent the creation of the time machine. — noAxioms
What does rewind do to the 40 years over which we backtrack? It either erases as it goes or that part of history gets overwritten as the recording resumes. — noAxioms
How does the butterfly effect of the time travel event necessarily prevent the evolution of humanity?
Who gets born is very much a function of exactly when people have sex, and which sperm wins. Which species come about is very much a function of random mutations and environmental chance. All these things are altered by chaotic things in the environment.
Read up on chaos theory. I can't possibly explain it to you in this context. There is no strange attractor for a specific person being born, or for a specific species to evolve. There would probably be mammals around since those existed in the Cretaceous, but probably no mammal that you'd recognize. — noAxioms
Your new suggestion says that the original (and only) timeline is truncated back to the destination event upon somebody time traveling backwards. If it subsequently (30 seconds later) is truncated again, by 30 seconds, then there is no way for the history of the timeline to grow beyond any backwards travel departure. The only way for it to go forward significantly is if there is never again a backwards time travel event. I don't know about forward time travel You've given seemingly no thought as to how that might work. — noAxioms
That's enough to end the universe, according to the 'rewind/truncate' thing you've been pushing lately. — noAxioms
I didn't say destroyed. I say it ends. Your idea posits that: If I go back to 1990, everything from there to 1990 ceases to be part of the universe. Is not the entire universe affected by this, or do we just rewind some limited region like Disneyland? — noAxioms
There is but the one timeline, unless we're changing stories again. — noAxioms
You didn't really give it a name, so I did. In it, travel to 1990 deletes 34 years of history and lets it all get rewritten again, but with a different 1990 state this go around. That 34 year scenario might well not end the universe, if the second go around can not only destroy that machine, but preventing anything anywhere (including other galaxies) from ever making one. This cannot occur in the 30-second story with the train tracks. No way to stop that one, so the universe ends there. — noAxioms
In the context you didn't include, it was because he travels to a time before his birth, thus altering 'history' to one in which he (or any other human for that matter) is never born. — noAxioms
That's popularized by the term 'butterfly effect'. Chaos theory is very clear on points like this. — noAxioms
The time traveller departs from the timeline without time travel and creates a timeline with time travel by doing so. — Luke
Again, I thought you were abandoning the interpretation with creation of timelines in favor of modifying the one and only line. — noAxioms
Back to the train tracks, Alice gets there just as the gates go down, but watches a very similar car ahead of here make it across. So she hits the button and goes back 30 seconds. That destroys the 30 seconds. She ends up at the tracks, and in time to scoot across. The world ends 30 seconds later when the car behind here truncates it there. There is no future after that. The universe cannot go on. — noAxioms
If it will help make things clearer, I can try to dispense with (McTaggart's) A-series terms. The time traveller departs from the year 2024 and arrives in the year 1990.
Seemingly an admission that time travel with presentism don't particularly mix. — noAxioms
SEP discusses it, but says very much that the arrival event occurs decades before the departure event, back when the arrival event was the present, which only happens once. That model doesn't have a history between those times where time travel hasn't yet happened. — noAxioms
There's no obvious correct way to compare moments between timelines. — noAxioms
Why would the time machine be un-built in 1990?
I don't mean disassembled. I mean something exists which never came into being. But this is in the truncate-model, which I'm rejecting because we could never have existed in such a universe.
I know you consider the machine to have been built, despite that process not existing, and 'was built' (a past tense reference) 30 years from now. As Dr Who said in his Xmas party: Didn't you get me this next year? — noAxioms
You may find it perfectly logical for a person to exist before they are born, but I do not.
I noticed. — noAxioms
But that's just a memory. It is a memory of nonexistent events.
His birth event (say in 1975) is nonexistent. He can't for instance take the machine back to it and witness it. — noAxioms
Yes. A machine appeared in the Cretaceous and humans evolve only on the timeline without the machine. — noAxioms
If the 2024 that doesn't yet include the time traveler is before the 1990 that includes the time traveler, then if would seem a stretch to call what he has done 'travel to the past'. It seems to be just a re-setting of the present state (the part outside of the machine) to what things looked like back then, but no actual travel anywhere. — noAxioms
The time traveller departs from the present and arrives in the past.
— Luke
So he's in 1990 despite it presently being 2024? What's it like to be in a place that isn't the present? I think the Steven King book/movie Langoliers had a plot like that. — noAxioms
The time traveller does not depart from the present of the spawned timeline, but from the present of the original timeline.
— Luke
You said you were rejecting the 'spawned timeline' idea that occupied so many of our posts. — noAxioms
I retain the idea that there must have been one version of history before any time travel events and a different version of history after the first time travel event (a history which henceforth includes a time traveller), at least different starting from the destination time of the time travel. — Luke
Keep in mind that I'm not a presentist, and am sort of having fun seeing how a presentist can phrase time travel coherently. — noAxioms
The inconsistency is calling 1990 'the past'. If the universe is currently being rewriten from there, then 1990 is the present, and there is no original history of making the machine. — noAxioms
then 1990 is the present, and there is no original history of making the machine. Those dates have yet to be written since they are in 'the future'. So now you have a machine sitting there un-built, but not un-caused. It was caused by a nonexistent retro-causal occurrence. — noAxioms
Point is, every use of the machine(s) in the backwards direction truncates history a little further. The population would empirically slowly dwindle in the branch timelines, but here you have no branches, only the original, and in that line, the present keeps moving backwards at frequent intervals. — noAxioms
Why was he never born?
— Luke
This isn't hard. His birth event doesn't exist (assuming he/somebody/something truncates the present to a date prior to the birth date. If he isn't the guy in the machine, then he doesn't exist either (at all). So not even a memory of being born. — noAxioms
We're in a universe with retro-causality here, one that a cause obliterates its own existence from the one history. — noAxioms
The only logical sequence of events is that the time traveller is first born and then time travels to visit the dinosaurs.
— Luke
That is not a logical sequence on the linear timeline. First he appears with the dinos. Then, much later, the time eventually comes that matches the year he remembers being born. There is no birth event of Bob at that time. The memory was false. — noAxioms
This implies that there must exist a linear time without any time traveller up until the time traveller's birth and subsequent time travel.
— Luke
Two kinds of time mixed there, unless the history line is never truncated, and the machine simply writes the current universe a new way without traveling at all. That model (I'll call it the stacking model)... — noAxioms
Surely, their birth must precede all the other events of their life
— Luke
So 2024 precedes year -100,000,000, a funny interpretation of the word 'precedes'. — noAxioms
In this context, I'm measuring it on the traveller's timeline
— Luke
Ah, you actually identify a line. — noAxioms
Sure, on that line, 2024 precedes -100M. But it's just a memory. His birth event (say in 1975) is nonexistent. He can't for instance take the machine back to it and witness it. — noAxioms
Being alive is pretty good evidence of having been born.
— Luke
Not if your earliest appearance was from a time machine. You keep thinking the rules of this universe apply to this retro-causal one. — noAxioms
If you're talking about the departure event, the appearance of the machine in 1990 does not follow that event. 1990 is before 2024
— noAxioms
The arrival of the time machine in 1990 does not follow its departure from 2024? But isn't that exactly what a time machine does?
— Luke
From the PoV of the machine, sure, That's the same as memory. 2024 feels like 'the recent past' to the machine and its contents. — noAxioms
you seem incapable of understanding why the jump counter in a loop would be a contradiction. — noAxioms
Although we would never know it. — jgill
They didn't in the [spawn new timeline] scenario, so nothing to explain. — noAxioms
However, this does not explain how a time traveller can have travelled to the past before their first ever time travel event.
— Luke
...I suppose it depends on which moment on the new timeline is consdiered to be 'the present'. — noAxioms
If, say, the present is designated to be 'the present' in this spawned timeline, then the traveler (if there is one) must be present at 'the past', 5 years prior. Did he travel there? I suppose he did — noAxioms
Did he travel from 'the future'? No. He came from a different line is all. — noAxioms
The 2024 of this timeline does not have him going back. — noAxioms
And as I said, the empirical experience of everybody is the same between the copy/paste interpretation and the 'alter the original' interpretation. Either way results in a general de-population of Earth from the travelers PoV — noAxioms
That's interpretation dependent. Empirically, the guy will remember being born, sure. Given the copy/past interpretation, yes, he was actually born in some timeline somewhere, one of many, but not this one. — noAxioms
In the alter-history interpretation, no he was never born. — noAxioms
That state doesn't exist in the one timeline. — noAxioms
You are using past-tense in a mixed way. Be specific. In the linear timeline, there are dinosaurs and a time machine that has appeared uncaused, all in the present. There are no other people on that timeline unless the guy brings a breeding population with him. Nobody was born. There is no 'must have been' about it since earlier times do not contain his birth. — noAxioms
Memories are thought of as 'past; things, so one could meaningfully said that he must have been born, but it's more like Adam and Eve and insisting that they must have been born which reportedly they actually had not. One wonders what their very first memories were. Did they have to learn to eat and not poop in your bed and had invent language? Our time traveler seems to have all that experience already, so he's better off. — noAxioms
Surely, their birth must precede all the other events of their life
— Luke
Again, on which timeline are you measuring this? Given a time machine, this would obviously not be true or a calendar timeline. Marty is in 1955, well before say 1968 when he is born, contradicting your statement. — noAxioms
On Marty's timeline, he is in what appears to be 1955, and has 17 years of memories, which include stories of his birth. If the memories were perfect, yea, he'd remember that birth. Whether that birth event actually exists is a matter of interpretation, just as is my birth event. Per last-Tuesdayism, there is no way I can prove that I was ever born. We all just assume it by convention. — noAxioms
Contradicting the fact that you just said it reads x+1, — noAxioms
OK, on hte Earth timeline, we're talking about dinosaurs then, just before the machine appears somewhere uncaused with an odometer reading 207. Before that Cretaceous time, no time travel event has ever occurred. History is a particular way then, but the Cretaceous is the present, so it goes only that far, and the rest is yet to be written. — noAxioms
The time travel event (the appearance of the box) only has a causal effect on subsequent events, not on the prior ones that are the 'history'. The machine doesn't alter history, but it truncates it to a point and starts a new rewrite. — noAxioms
If I were to time travel tomorrow, back to 1985, then I would be altering history as we now know it.
— Luke
The word 'now' in that sentence is ambiguous. Presumably you are still planning to go back to 1985, and thus it is still 'now' 2024, and there is still a 'we' to know such things.
If the action has just been done, then 'now' is 1985, — noAxioms
After that, history will contain my time travel event, but it must also contain the "unaltered" history that preceded my time travel event
— Luke
You mean 1984? — noAxioms
you cannot already have arrived at 1990 (as a time traveller) before you have time travelled to 1990.
— Luke
Traveling to 1990 and arriving there is the same thing. That arrival event IS the time travel event. Are you talking about a different jump? — noAxioms
Before that is 1989. 1991 is after that. — noAxioms
If you're interested in consequences, you need to address the case of multiple machines crossing each other. I thought we were deliberately ignoring the lack of possibility. If you're actually interested in it, then exploring consequences is moot until you find a way that it's actually viable. SEP seems to suggest that pacing counts, but that's hardly something with interesting consequences. — noAxioms
Again, it doesn't follow a time travel event, it is the event. — noAxioms
If you're talking about the departure event, the appearance of the machine in 1990 does not follow that event. 1990 is before 2024. — noAxioms
The loop does not erase its construction. It isn't something that is constructed at all. It's a solid example that 'things' in that universe don't necessarily need a construction phase. — noAxioms
It has a causal history. It's just a retro-causal history is all. As I said, you're going about finding the inconsistency all wrong. Stop trying to find the end of a loop that doesn't have one. That's not where the inconsistency is. — noAxioms
The same applies to the dinosaur visitor who can exist in the past (which is necessarily post-time travel) prior to ever having been born (which is necessarily pre-time travel).
— Luke
He was necessarily born pre-Cretaceous? That makes no sense to me. It can make sense in the branching case, depending on how one chooses to order events that are not on the same timeline. — noAxioms
Why? He's already got the first 'you' teaching him. How many of you does it take? You're not making a loop by doing this. You're making a crowd control situation. — noAxioms
Well, you just had two different people (both you) time travel to the same spot. What if the coordinates are exact and second one obliterates whatever was at the spot at which it appear? I mean, you've never really specified what happens when the machine pops into existence somewhere. What happens to the bugs and other contents of that location? If there's a person there, or half of one, or the middle of a jet engine in flight? What if you manifest a mile underground? Never mind you being somewhat stuck, but what happens to the rock that was there a moment ago? — noAxioms
As I said earlier:
...it would be logically impossible to travel to 'the past' (i.e. on a single timeline) unless I was somehow already there before I time travelled. But how could I already be there before I time travel?
— Luke
Yes, we are talking about the original timeline. — Luke
Given physics where there is a timeline that is the original one, that line cannot have a time traveler in it at all. All the copy lines have but the traveler(s) that created that line (assuming the machine had one or more passengers). So in those lines, any traveler was already there at its start. — noAxioms
Given the physics of a single timeline, various machines might travel here and there, but there would be presumably some earliest one (to see dinosaurs say). In such a situation, there is no traveler before that earliest Cretaceous period. — noAxioms
There are valid scenarios with such a single timeline, but the traveler (if it is human) is part of 'the past' then and lacks the free will to do otherwise. I agree this runs into serious problems if he knows what he does (say a minute ago) and goes back explicitly to do a different thing. No amount of determinism is going to prevent that. Determinism is not a thing with a will different than yours. Nobody seems to realize that. — noAxioms
Why does it need to revert to a reading of x again 8 seconds later?
— Luke
Because it reads x when it appears 8 seconds before that. You know that. It's on the outside and you read it. You can't read it being x, x+1, and all the other numbers. The number has to match at both ends, or it didn't come from that 8-seconds hence jump. It wouldn't be a loop, just a stopover, and a different party popper than the one he took from you. — noAxioms
OK. That's not something we discussed yet. How does it empirically differ from the branch thing? The old 'history' goes away, so there's nobody to witness the population of the world going down. There are a whole mess of uncaused events going on, but besides the classical impossibility of that, no other contradictions. You have people who don't have valid identification. Maybe no other people at all. So the empirical experience of those you don't take with you is irrelevant, and the empirical experience of the traveler is identical to the experience of the guy in the branching model. So this sounds like a different interpretation of the exact same experience. — noAxioms
This might create a causal loop or it might not. However, the main idea I've been trying to convey all along is that there must be an original version of "the past" prior to the first ever time travel event
— Luke
OK, back before the earliest time, before the destination of any retro-time traveler.
Or do you mean 'first' on the timeline of some traveler instead of on the one world timeline? — noAxioms
and is necessarily different to the version of "the past" that exists post-time travel.
— Luke
Suppose I travel to 1990. How is what you call the original line (the one I remember with cellphones and all) is 'the past'? It's not before 1990, and for that matter, it's not after either. It just isn't at all. — noAxioms
It all sounds like a re-growing-block model, except that disallows forward time travel since the destination specifed doesn't yet exist. I set sights for the year 3000 (like in Futurama), but while my machine is waiting for Y3000 to come around, somebody else uses a time machine to go back to 1985, thus obliterating me and the destination I targeted. same fate awaiting all those people paying for cryonic preservation. It requires a stability that just isn't there. — noAxioms
This helps to retain "normal" causality, thus removing the need for the magical appearance of time machines or technology "out of nowhere", existing uncaused
— Luke
But all your scenarios describe exactly that, including pretty much every fictional story that I can think of. — noAxioms
Nobody can demonstrate the typical definition of free will. — noAxioms
It's a hazard of living in such a world is that your life expectancy outside the machine is moments at a time — noAxioms
and no better inside the machine since no time passes in there (unless you assert otherwise I guess). — noAxioms
OK. The 8 second machine is created in front of me at some point, and un-created 8 seconds later when it vanishes. Works for me.
— noAxioms
That doesn't explain how the time machine was created for the time traveller.
— Luke
It's not created for the time traveler any more than the time traveler is created or has an age. — noAxioms
It has a first appearance?
— Luke
8 second guy has a first and only appearance, yes. From his looping timeline, there is no first anything. It's a circular timeline. — noAxioms
But is single-timeline travel necessarily contradictory, even if one does make different choices post-time travel?
— Luke
What you describe above is a single preferred timeline scenario, with all the non-preferred timelines being nonexistent. I am not sure if there are 'different choices' involved since there is but the one timeline, and thus one choice being made at any point in time. Sure, you remember making different choices, but those are memories of nonexistent times. — noAxioms
OK, Bob makes the machine and uses it to go from 2024 to a new timeline starting at 1990. Any point on the original timeline before Bob vanishes from it is the time before the first travel event. There is no time on the new timeline before the first travel since it starts there, kind of per last-Tuesdayism.
I lost track of the question about this 'time before'. Are we talking about say 2023 on the original timeline or am I still getting it wrong? — noAxioms
...it would be logically impossible to travel to 'the past' (i.e. on a single timeline) unless I was somehow already there before I time travelled. But how could I already be there before I time travel? — Luke
There can't be one on the machine that jumps in the loop. Bob's machine can have an odometer, no problem.
The contradiction: Suppose, just before the jump, the odometer reads x. It arrives at its destination (8 seconds in the past in my popper example) and immediately increments the thing to x+1. This contradicts it leaving 8 seconds later with a reading of x. — noAxioms
That's what you are apparently trying to figure out. I don't know either, so I'm also exploring. What I don't do is presume the usual rules, such as that a place that almost looks like the state of things in 1990 is prior to the state of things in 2024. I also don't presume that the cause of a thing is necessarily prior to the thing. That's a pretty obvious one to throw out. — noAxioms
I think the rule you find hard to discard is that all seemingly artificial things must somehow be invented and assembled at some point, and the examples we show are consistent without all those steps. Sure, the machine is built in the teaching loop, but the technology knowledge (the inventing) is the loop, information that is never gleaned, but is merely passed on. — noAxioms
I suppose I could alter P2 to say that time machines involved in human time travel need to be created at some point.
— Luke
OK. The 8 second machine is created in front of me at some point, and un-created 8 seconds later when it vanishes. Works for me. — noAxioms
Dangerous to use the word 'first' when the temporal ordering of things is not objective. I think that's where a lot of the trouble comes from. — noAxioms
Nope. It came into existence when it first appears... — noAxioms
But single-timeline travel isn't necessarily contradictory so long as one does not make choices known to be different than those made before. — noAxioms
What I meant was: how could I already be in the past before I have ever time travelled?
— Luke
If you time travel to the past, by definition you end up somewhere 'before' the event where you initiated the travel. — noAxioms
There would be no 'first time' to a loop. As I said, there can be no odometer on the machine counting jumps. That would be a contradiction. — noAxioms
That would be a contradiction. — noAxioms
I could already be in the past (on a single timeline) if I had time travelled before but, given causality, there must have been a first time that I ever used the time machine to time travel. How could I already be in the past prior to that?
— Luke
I don't understand this. If the jump is from 2024 to 1990, then 1990 is 'the past' destination, and you are not in a past that is prior to that except perhaps as a young person, the one that you teach. — noAxioms
Things that are impossible in this universe are not impossible in this alternate universe where time travel makes for different causal rules. — noAxioms
The rules are different in the universe we're discussing. With the loop scenario, there is no 'first ever' to it. You can't count them. The loop is just there, and is self-consistent. — noAxioms
Not if it is part of a loop. The whole 'must be a first time for everything' is only a rule in a universe like ours, intuitive to us, but not true in the sort of scenario we're discussing. — noAxioms
So maybe this time traveling creature never evolved, but just is. Again, there are movies depicting pretty much this. — noAxioms
I will not. We're discussing the possibility of closed loops, and loops falsify P2. — noAxioms
To say that time machines have always existed is more like saying that waffle irons have always existed.
— Luke
Your wording suggests that the machine exists at all times, which isn't the case. It exists in the loop in the museum case. It doesn't exist at other times. — noAxioms
An un-created time machine does not violate any rules in a universe where time travel is possible.
— noAxioms
Sure, but it would imply no time travel.
— Luke
Same counterexample falsifies this.
Imagine you're holding one of those party poppers that you pull and it explodes a bit of confetti around. You're about to do it and a box appears in front of you from which a some guy jumps out and explodes his own party popper as he says "three!". Then he grabs yours (unpopped), and apologizes, says the box is a time machine that goes back 8 seconds, the says "One, two, ..." and the box disappears, leaving you simply befuddled. That's what an 8 second loop looks like. — noAxioms
The kind of causality rules you're thinking of don't exist in a universe with time travel. A first time for a loop would contradict its existence, which is travel from the other end of the loop and not somewhere else. — noAxioms
Not following. There a possibility of a loop that doesn't involve time travel? Example please. — noAxioms