"One must determine something which remains unchanged for a period of time, and this is continuity". What you are describing is a mathematical abstraction. It is a device that we invented as a tool in our attempts to make sense of the world. But other than pure mathematical objects, there is no such thing as pure continuity in the world of meaningful experience. — Joshs
As far as continuing to be the same differently, if you repeat a word to yourself over and over(or glance at it on a page), the sense of the word will change. This effect applies to any meaning we attempt to repeat. If you want to preserve 'same' to mean pure mathematical identity, then, what we intend to mean when we repeat a meaning continues to be similar to itself by at the same time differing from itself. This is non-logical continuity, the way our unfolding experiences belong to patterns and themes while always transforming in subtle ways the very meaning of those patterns and themes. — Joshs
In order to see what various things have in common requires making distinctions and disregarding all other features. — Fooloso4
One can have an experience of the “flow” even without reflection
on time, without applying the notion of the past and the present. It is a basic experience of some change, a passive synthesis, the living present. — Number2018
So, we can define “flow” as “this living present.” — Number2018
The key quote from James is :"What we hear when the thunder crashes is not thunder
pure, but thunder-breaking-upon-silence-and-contrasting-with-it. Our feeling of the same
objective thunder, coming in this way, is quite different from what it would be were the thunder
a continuation of previous thunder." — Joshs
It must be understood instead as akin to a fabric changing its textural shape as a whole, in a breeze .It is not a matter of reductively determining each state of the fabric by reference to a previous state, because the attempt to do so further transforms the sense of that past. — Joshs
It is not a matter of reductively determining each state of the fabric by reference to a previous state, because the attempt to do so further transforms the sense of that past. — Joshs
There is a way of continuing to be the same differently that eludes the reifications of conceptual logic, a kind of referential but not deterministic consistency, that accrods better with actual phenomological experience of the world — Joshs
So if we assume your premise that the present is a change between the past and the future is true then how can you explain the space-time continuum? It is represented as a continuity not a discontinuity in time. — Paul24
Past may be determined and fixed, but it must also enter into the very horizon that we experience as the 'present'. Otherwise there would be no sense of the continuity of meaning and purpose from moment to moment. The present arises out of a background context that it is at the same time continuous with and differs from. — Joshs
I'm not following your reasoning here, why would never being sure you learnt it advise reading more? In hope some surity might one day come, perhaps? I can perhaps see that in some defined topic with widespread agreement. If I didn't get maths I might well simply continue reading in the hope that one day I get what everyone else seems to have got. But what is it that everyone seems to have got in philosophy? I've reached just about the highest level of 'state-approved' learning it's possible to reach. I'm not sure I've 'got' anything at all. — Isaac
98. On the one hand it is clear that every sentence in our language
'is in order as it is'. That is to say, we are not striving after an ideal,
as if our ordinary vague sentences had not yet got a quite unexceptionable
sense, and a perfect language awaited construction by us.—On the
other hand it seems clear that where there is sense there must be perfect
order.——So there must be perfect order even in the vaguest sentence.
81 ...But here the word "ideal" is liable to mislead, for it sounds as if these languages were better, more perfect ...
You name me a conceivable position one could hold with respect to the current text and I'll find you a professional published philosopher who holds that view. To be honest, the view you personally seem to hold would be about the hardest, Norman Malcom perhaps is closest. — Isaac
The point is it seems to be a quest which the very nature of it admits will never be fulfilled. — Isaac
Yes, but did Kant himself think that "one simple unity" was empirical? I think to him, numbers themselves and counting were all a priori, though possibly synthetic. — schopenhauer1
Again, that's where I get confused with Kant. He doesn't demarcate enough. His examples are kind of fuzzy and taken as givens of why they are a priori sometimes. — schopenhauer1
Since time appears like a flow to us, could it be possible that the past, the present and the future be as one? — Paul24
Everyone reads every text looking to find support for the thing they already believe to be the case at the outset. — Isaac
Infinite divisibility is an insufficient criterion for continuity. After all, the rational numbers are infinitely divisible--thus serving as the basis for Zeno's paradoxes--but no one takes them to be truly continuous. I now find magnification to be a more perspicuous illustration--no matter how much we were to "zoom in" on continuous space-time, we would only ever "see" continuous space-time--never discrete point-instants. — aletheist
No, space-time itself is the terrain, and mathematical models of it are the map. — aletheist
Infinite divisibility is a red herring. Continuous motion through space-time is the fundamental reality. — aletheist
False, spacetime is real as in it's part of the model of physical reality as understood by both QM and Relativity. — MindForged
Whether or not a graviton exists isn't even understood. — MindForged
(just a feature of space in the presence of matter) — MindForged
Spacetime is a real thing. — MindForged
General relativity gives us an incredibly accurate understanding of gravity and acceleration. — MindForged
Like come on, you're not giving anything serious to overturn the overwhelmingly minority position you hold as compared to physicists on the issue. — MindForged
If they cannot be observed (nor their consequences) then how can you know this? You're begging the question by presuming we're born with some instinctual understanding and so not being satisfied until you have found it. — Isaac
And how do you know they are faulty. What test are you applying here? — Isaac
Why on earth is this a problem? What aspects of human life has been so manifestly spoiled by the fact that not everyone agrees where blue ends and green starts? — Isaac
I mean, there's only four basic ways to interpret the PI — Isaac
Huh? The assumption of discreteness is what creates problems like Zeno's paradoxes. As I have said before, recognizing that continuous motion through space-time is a more fundamental reality than discrete positions in space or discrete moments in time dissolves Zeno's paradoxes. — aletheist
I am not aware of any reason to interpret them as inconsistent with the continuity of space-time. — aletheist
The theory of relativity in physics does
not deal with what time is but deals only with how time, in the sense of
a now-sequence, can be measured. — Joshs
I see it the other way around--measurement is arbitrary; we impose it by comparing something to a discrete unit, but the underlying reality itself is continuous. — aletheist
I am not aware of any such premise. Relativity theory is the basis for the current scientific understanding of the space-time continuum. — aletheist
There is nothing to warrant the assumption that discrete things can exist and interact without a continuous medium within which to do so. — aletheist
I am not aware of any such evidence. — aletheist
This is similar to the person who gives the order to Wittgenstein to teach the children a game - they do not "properly determine" or draw a boundary around what type of game to teach the children at first (i.e. they do not tell him to exclude gambilng games), but this does not change the meaning of "game". In your words, it just means they are "not fussy about the particular" game. The further instruction not to teach them a gambling game acts as a rigid boundary, or a more specific definition, for this special purpose. — Luke
What do you mean by "properly determined"? — Luke
you want to know how people learn colours then you'd be well advised to simply observe people learning colours. It's an empirical investigation, it can't be carried out from the armchair. — Isaac
I mean we deal with the situation quite comfortably all the time. It serves no purpose to say "there's something queer going on here" when doing it is the simplest thing, all we're having trouble with is saying what it is that we're doing, and that is a pseudo problem, it may just not be sayable. — Isaac
It seems quite evident to me that there must be a real context within which discrete things exist and react. For example, we say that they have extension in space-time. — aletheist
First, I am arguing for the reality of space-time, not its existence; as I have stated repeatedly, these terms are not synonymous. Second, there is no necessity for something real to be absolute--the whole point of relativity is that space-time is really relative; as I have also stated repeatedly, continuous motion through space-time is a more fundamental reality than discrete positions in space or discrete moments in time. — aletheist
All discrete things and events behave in a way which is consistent with the continuity of space-time. — aletheist
But who thought we did learn colours like that. Did you? — Isaac
It's not a puzzle in the least... — Isaac
unless you are looking for a general rule, which is exactly the sort of philosophical muddle Wittgenstein is trying to resolve. — Isaac
We have no trouble with this, nor would anyone describing our actions literally in this case describe them otherwise. — Isaac
74 ... Of course, there is such a thing as seeing in this way or that; and there are also cases where whoever sees a sample like this will in general use it in this way, and whoever sees it otherwise in another way.
A medium cannot consist of discrete things or discrete events, because it is the environment in which those things react and events occur. — aletheist
I agree--but continuous space-time is the real environment in which those discrete things exist. — aletheist
If the discrete things and events that we can and do observe behave in ways that are consistent with continuity, why would we rule out its reality? — aletheist
So yes, I do get a bit frustrated at what I see as a long discussion about how thermometers work (to return to my metaphor) when I don't see anything there that any rational person could disagree with. 72, where we're currently at, is a classic example. Luke has just accurately laid out what Wittgenstein means by this example, but what is there to disagree with about it? I mean what possible other way could any intelligent person think about such cases? — Isaac
Can you (or anyone else) establish or change the properties of space-time just by thinking differently about them? — aletheist
Sorry, that is not what it means to be a medium. — aletheist
That's your opinion. Got any support for that opinion? — aletheist
No, space-time is real--it is as it is regardless of what any individual mind or finite group of minds thinks about it. — aletheist
On the contrary, space-time is the continuous medium (reality) within which discrete things react and discrete events occur (existence). — aletheist
Spacetime is literally part of the relevant models in physics. — MindForged
Spacetime has it's own behavior which is correctly predicted by current models, namely how it is deformed by massive objects. — MindForged
MU, what you're saying goes way beyond what I'm saying, so don't equate the two. — Sam26
The way you talk about rules seems confusing to me. — Sam26
On the whole I think the thread is going well. I hope we don't give up on it like so many other threads. — Sam26
Spacetime is not conceptual, not under any model in physics. You'd have to be seriously in denial to think models saying space is curved and correctly predict gravitational lensing and predicts that simulateneity is relative to reference frames is also saying that thing is not part of the world — MindForged
I've said it myself, but we have to be careful, i.e., if meaning equates to use, then it would follow that anyone, or any group who used a word or concept incorrectly, could make the claim that their use of the word is the correct use. — Sam26
If you were to "zoom in" on space-time itself--not any physical object within space-time--you would never "see" anything other than continuous space-time. — aletheist
2. It isn't possible to wilfully forget. Try forgetting your name. Unless you have brain damage that isn't possible even if you distracted yourself or emply other techniques you suggest. — TheMadFool
