but how would you experience time, if it wasn't by measuring physical activity?
but how would you experience time, if it wasn't by measuring physical activity? — wax
So, if we are using measuring devices to indicate time, — philosophy
You experience time tacitly by existing. — emancipate
But isn't the key word in all this appearance? The ball appears to travel slowly for the observer on Earth, but it doesn't follow from this that the ball is really travelling slowly. — philosophy
This is interesting. So, if a person were locked in a room with nothing in that room, would that person still retain a sense of the passage of time? — philosophy
I get your point here. But what if we had a universe with no observers? If motion is relative to an observer, would it not follow that there would be no motion in said universe?Is there somehow an objective speed of the ball? — wax
I get your point here. But what if we had a universe with no observers? If motion is relative to an observer, would it not follow that there would be no motion in said universe? — philosophy
Is there somehow an objective speed of the ball? — wax
I think so, yes. Wouldn't the objective speed of the ball be the speed of the ball as it is, independent of observation? The moment we observe the ball we are doing so from a perspective. If the light rays travelling from the ball take longer/shorter to reach me than they do you, then we reach different perspectives regarding the motion of the ball. But why should we tie the motion of the ball to the distance that light rays travel? This seems arbitrary. There is an objective motion to the ball but it cannot itself be observed. — philosophy
if you think about what a ball actually is, it is bunch of atoms, made of fields, and these fields transmit the information — wax
But this still means that there is something that transmits this information. We can distinguish between that which transmits and that which is transmitted. By definition, we can only measure that which is transmitted. But wouldn't that which transmits be the underling, objective basis for what we call the ''ball''? — philosophy
My intuition here, of course, is that time is a constant which is independent of any measuring devices and the conditions in which said devices operate.
Or have I missed something? — philosophy
Einstein did not reason thus, nor did he conclude that time slows for any observer. Anybody will observe their own clock (one in their presence) to run at the normal rate, regardless of speed relative to other objects.Einstein reasoned that if he were to travel at the speed of light then clocks would appear to stop moving (since the light from the clocks would never reach him). Einstein concluded that time slows down the faster to the speed of light you travel. — philosophy
On the contrary. Time, to Einstein at least, is exactly what clocks measure. If one twin is younger than another, it is because it has been less time since birth for that twin than the other. But if those twins are moving relative to each other, then each twin ages slower than the other one in his own frame, which means the twin that stayed home ages at a reduced pace both in the inertial frame of the departing twin and in the inertial frame of the returning twin.In other words, time is not the same as a measuring device (e.g. a clock).
Could it be that Einstein's theory is just another ''approximation'' of reality like Newton's theory? — TheMadFool
Therefore, our theories must be limited by it. What if there's ''other'' stuff that exist that would require a new theory which I guess would also be ''just'' another approximation. — TheMadFool
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.