Speakpigeon wrote: ↑Mon Apr 01, 2019 5:50 pm
Scott Mayers wrote: ↑Mon Apr 01, 2019 2:40 pm
If your reference to "blocks" is what is referred to as
static, this is how Einstein pictured it and I agree with. Time acts as just another static dimension where each moment is frame of 3-dimensional space, like a movie frame. The movie frames collectively create the illusion of time as a whole strip or "motion picture". It can be further illustrated that for every optional perspective, we have different possible frame sets for each single image, making up an infinite set of times as another kind of dimension. Each picture/frame is like a word in language in which we can use them in an infinite different ways to create different story lines.
There's nonetheless a difficulty with this view. It doesn't chime with our subjective experience of time, namely that we experience one moment after another rather than the whole block of our life. Haven't found any solution to that.
But what does "after" mean without defining some "order in time"? You'd be forced to beg how "time" means "what comes
after in something
in time, without being circular.
But treating time as 'static', then you can use a similar kind of argument that set theory uses to defined 'ordered' things. [like that if you have {x, {x, y}} to represent the concept of
order. Without getting into the details, the object x is singular where the collective set of objects x with y treats these distinct types of sets as ordered because where x can stand alone, where the second possible set exists as an option, y is dependent upon x....and thus we have some concept of 'order']
We are stuck with our particular existence as dependent upon time in a similar way. We are at least that which is dependent upon time to exist because time can exist with or without our own existence, and we don't
sense reality -- and thus existence -- without time itself. All we can do is relate some relative static comparison of ourselves to some other set of realities in a similar way. "Time" then is a type of 'distance' where we treat it objectively, and requires comparison to other distinctly different distances.
For instance, a
time can be defined as an interval of maximum exchange of some point, x, to some point, non-x. Obviously if we have one maximum 'speed' of everything, then a year, as one measure-type of time, is the maximum distance that anything from one point can communicate or translate any contextual meaning of it to another point, such that it is the same maximum distance traveled by the Earth
in a circle of equal circumference to that measured linear distance between two points.
No. It was initially a post on another forum.
EB
I thought you were relating the concept of time to our concept of existence. It thus relates to that thread regardless. If anything has its own state of being, it is a relative, "I", and only
exists where it has some distinctive different state of being some "non-I". If this were not true, we return to the concept of 'solipsism' because we could only interpret meaning to existence in contrast to something we are not.
Thus this means that we can treat "time" as any distinct difference between two sets of common things in different arrangements with respect to another. We are then bound to treat our experience of time as the capacity to measure some state x, as being contrast to some non-x state that also contains it, such as a state with some-x AND some-non-x. {x, {x, (some-non-x)}}, where y = 'some-non-x'.