Both the external world pattern and the pattern of neuronal firings are patterns in an eternalist block spacetime, but every pattern has a qualitative aspect (in addition to its structural aspect); in the case of the neuronal firings it is a conscious quality (quale/experience) while in the case of the external world it is, presumably, an unconscious quality. — litewave
But as I said, both kinds of the passage of time are qualitative aspects of a static, eternalist pattern. — litewave
What is the difference between "existing right now" and being "currently present"? — Janus
One version of Non-presentism is Eternalism, which says that objects from both the past and the future exist just as much as present objects. — Stanford Article on Time
I'm on record for not liking the way Stanford words that whole section. My interpretation of that statement (You also edit out the disclaimer that explains what they mean by "existing right now") is that at any given moment ('now' for instance), the other moments ontologically exist equally. Thus I do not disagree with the entry, but I find it poorly worded. Alec interprets all moments "existing right now" to imply that they're all simultaneous, which is a temporal statement, not an ontological one. All moments are not simultaneous under eternalism.Eternalism is not an assertion that all times 'currently exist'.
— noAxioms
From the Stanford entry:
According to Eternalism, non-present objects like Socrates and future Martian outposts exist right now, even though they are not currently present.
— Alec
What is the difference between "existing right now" and being "currently present"? — Janus
Yes, it is similar to exactly that: "Every point in space exists right here." That means that despite being right here, it does not imply that other locations do not exist. They all have equal ontology, and there is no preferred 'here'. Saying they all exist right here does not imply that all points are at the same location, but the statement "Every point in space exists right here." tempts one to interpret the statement exactly that way. Hence I don't like the Stanford wording.This is similar to the idea that "right here" could be anywhere is space, or in other words is applicable in general to everywhere, not merely specifically to where you or I happen to be.
I think it legal to use these tenses, but the reference point must be explicit, lacking an objective present. So from 1910's present, WWI will happen. Events are still ordered and the tenses are not completely invalid. But to imply a present when speaking on eternalist terms is to refer to an ambiguous event.That is just a basic fact. To say that something "has happened" or "will happen" would require a flow of time. — Mr Bee
I think it legal to use these tenses, but the reference point must be explicit, lacking an objective present. — noAxioms
So from 1910's present, WWI will happen. Events are still ordered and the tenses are not completely invalid. — noAxioms
The "patterns" you refer to are a temporal succession, one neuron firing is experienced as prior to another etc. In the block universe, how does one thing get experienced as prior to another? — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see how a passage of time is a qualitative aspect of a static eternalist pattern. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm on record for not liking the way Stanford words that whole section. — noAxioms
Because of causal relations between one thing and another. There is a causal imprint of the earlier thing in the later thing, so the experience of the later thing enables us to identify it as being after the earlier thing. — litewave
Still, since the intrinsic and the structural identity of a thing are bound up like two sides of a coin (they are identities of the same thing), we can expect that structurally similar patterns will also have similar qualities. We can also expect that the quality will somehow reflect the structure, so it can make some sense that the causal structure of brain processes, which enables the identification of prior and later moments, will be reflected in the experience of a passage of time. — litewave
Of course there are simultaneously occurring phenomenon. How else do we measure time if not by the simultaneous rotation of the Earth with a movement of the hands of a clock? Sure, they are in their own "time" - which is just relative change, but change is occurring everywhere, simultaneously, but at different rates. We can call this the frequency of change.No, not simultaneously. Each moment is its own time (they're not simultaneous any more than each location is the same place). It's just that no particular moment is special any more than any particular location is the one correct 'here'. — noAxioms
Our minds have their own "time", as noAxioms put it. I would say that things, including our minds, have their own frequency of change. Time is simply an arbitrary measurement of change.According to eternalism, every moment in the universe's history is real and as such exists simultaneously. They all exist on a 4-D structure known as the block universe and are all equally real. Such a theory is considered static due to this fact. There is no such thing as the passage of time.
However, I am having trouble understanding how such a model accommodates our experience. To be clear though, I am not referring to an experience of time as passing in a world that isn't; that is another issue for another topic. Instead, I am talking about the fact that currently, I have the subjective experience of this particular moment of asking this question. — Alec
But causality is highly questionable in eternalism. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is how we experience time, as order. — Metaphysician Undercover
You misunderstand me. Stanford eternalism entry says that 1917 say, "exists right now", tempting one to imply that 1917 and 'now' are simultaneous. Eternalism does not assert that.Of course there are simultaneously occurring phenomenon. How else do we measure time if not by the simultaneous rotation of the Earth with a movement of the hands of a clock? — Harry Hindu
Assuming I am an eternalist (I'm not really), is it not legal for the October2017-noAxioms to say that Christmas will be on a Monday this year and last was on a Sunday? If the October2017-noAxioms can legally use those tenses, surely it is valid for the October2016-noAxioms to assert that this Christmas will be on a Sunday. Or do you disagree? Not sure what you're saying is invalid to do.I think it legal to use these tenses, but the reference point must be explicit, lacking an objective present.
— noAxioms
No it isn't. If you don't believe in an objective flow of time then there is no meaning to saying that events have occurred or will occur. That is really the main crux of the eternalist vs presentist debate, the existence of this passage. The only tense that makes sense is to say that all things "are", which is to say that they are all exist now in the way we normally understand things existing right now. — Mr Bee
Assuming I am an eternalist (I'm not really), is it not legal for the October2017-noAxioms to say that Christmas will be on a Monday this year and last was on a Sunday? If the October2017-noAxioms can legally use those tenses, surely it is valid for the October2016-noAxioms to assert that this Christmas will be on a Sunday. Or do you disagree? Not sure what you're saying is invalid to do. — noAxioms
So all of language is wrong if eternalism is the case? I don't consider saying that "Xmas will be on a Monday" to be an assertion of presentism. It's just how language works.Nope, because under eternalism, it simply isn't the case that Christmas "will exist". Christmas doesn't just pass into existence and October out of it. Instead it already exists at a part of the block universe and it is located later to where October-2017-noaxioms is located on the block. The Christmas located on a Sunday of 2016 is located earlier to the same individual. — Mr Bee
Yes, I agree that the tenses should be avoided when speaking in eternalist terms, but only because of the lack of a reference point.You try to bring in talk of "will" and "was" to the mix, but that just confuses things, as they are commonly associated with the passage of time. — Mr Bee
I disagree with the reference to "right now". What does that mean in eternalist terms?? There is no "right now".It is a basic fact that eternalism is commonly associated with the rejection of the flow of time, but I highly suggest you look at any corner of the literature if you're not convinced. This is why the article says that every event exists "right now", but I am not sure why you disagree with it. — Mr Bee
So all of language is wrong if eternalism is the case? I don't consider saying that "Xmas will be on a Monday" to be an assertion of presentism. It's just how language works. — noAxioms
I disagree with the reference to "right now". What does that mean in eternalist terms?? There is no "right now". — noAxioms
I think the better question is, what does it mean to exist if things neither existed, will exist or currently exist. — Mr Bee
From the "point of view" of eternalism everything exists eternally, in its eternal "right now" or eternal present. From a temporal perspective, of course everything that has, does or will exist does not exist in the current "right now", but does exist in some other "right now". — Janus
Ok, I see where I misunderstood.You misunderstand me. Stanford eternalism entry says that 1917 say, "exists right now", tempting one to imply that 1917 and 'now' are simultaneous. Eternalism does not assert that. — noAxioms
Time is a special kind of order. At least in our world this order is defined as the time dimension of spacetime according to the theory of relativity and the direction of this order (the arrow of time) is defined by the increasing entropy (second law of thermodynamics). All of this is already included in the structure of block spacetime. The remaining problem is why this order appears to be "passing" or "flowing", and I am saying that this appearance of "passing" or "flowing" is a feeling, a quality of consciousness, a qualitative aspect of neuronal firings. This is the subjective (experiential) passage of time. I am also saying that this quality of neuronal firings is a representation of a quality of the world, and I am suggesting that this quality of the world can be regarded as an objective passage of time. — litewave
Causal relations are part of the structure of block spacetime. I think causal relations are a special kind of mathematical/logical relations in the context of the entropic arrow of time where consequences logically follow from causes, if we use a broad definition of "causes" as initial conditions and structural features of spacetime that we call laws of physics. So, if you can logically derive a pattern at some moment of time from a pattern at a prior moment of time and laws of physics, then there is a causal relation between the two patterns. — litewave
So "increasing entropy" is a concept derived from observations of the physical world, and these observations directly contradict the block universe theory because they indicate that time can only flow in one direction, while the block universe allows that time could flow in either direction. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, presentations of block universe typically assume a single direction of time, which is usually identified with the direction of increasing entropy along the otherwise bi-directional time dimension. As an example, imagine a gas tank with gas concentrated in one of the corners of the tank. According to the second law of thermodynamics the entropy of the gas tank increases with time, so at the subsequent moments of time the state of the tank will have more and more dispersed gas particles. So there is a series of states of the gas tank, each state having more entropy (more dispersed gas) than the previous state, and this series constitutes an eternalist block. There is no obvious "passage" of time in this block; it's just a series of arrangements of gas particles. — litewave
Right, so the point at issue is the second law of thermodynamics. It indicates that the structure of patterns within the eternalist block are such that we must proceed in our experience of time passing, in one direction only. — Metaphysician Undercover
But the eternalist block allows that we could experience time in both directions. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why do you think so? As far as I know, the eternalist block just says that there is no passage of time because spacetime is a static, timeless object. — litewave
The second law of thermodynamics, necessitates that time is passing in one direction, so it represents that outside force. — Metaphysician Undercover
The second law of thermodynamics describes a force external to the universe, which is imposed on it. — Metaphysician Undercover
The second law of thermodynamics is a structural feature of the universe. — litewave
The second law is not a structural feature of the eternalist block universe, that's the inconsistency I'm talking about. Either the eternalist block provides an incomplete representation of the universe, or the second law refers to something outside the universe. — Metaphysician Undercover
Because there is no slices in the block, it is a block. The slicing and ordering is done by something outside the universe. — Metaphysician Undercover
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