For instance, can something exist that is infinitely extended? Well, no. — Bartricks
Why not? You are making it axiomatic that this cannot happen. Is your axiom true or false? How can you tell? — John Gill
Thanks for reminding me. All I wanted to do was prove that time is non-spatial, despite its measurement being so and that time isn't some kind a special space. Although it's represented as a 4th dimension in modern physics it is unique enough to deserve separate treatment. — TheMadFool
1. If time is a dimension, then it will be infinitely divisible
2. Nothing existent can be infinitely divisible.
3. Therefore, if time is a dimension it does not exist
4. Time exists
5. Therefore, time is not a dimension — Bartricks
Nay saying isn't arguing. — Bartricks
misuse words — Banno
Nor is mere assertion. — Banno
7 is laughable example. I mean, really? 7 is a thing, is it? A thing that can be infinitely divided? And it cannot actually be infinitely divided, only potentially so. You're mistaking the number 7 with '7 things'. — Bartricks
1. If an infinitely divisible thing can exist, then a hotel with infinite rooms can exist
2. A hotel with infinite rooms is a hotel that can be full to capacity, yet still admit new guests - an infinite number.
3. It is impossible for there to be a hotel that is full to capacity yet can still admit new guests
4. Therefore an infinitely divisible thing cannot exist — Bartricks
So you say seven doesn't exist? Or seven cannot be divided by any other number? Or both? — Banno
And yet again, your objection shows only that you choose not to use"infinite" in the way mathematicians do, — Banno
I answered those questions.
A substance is a bearer of properties.
And to be 'extended' is to occupy some space.
'Time' is neither. It exists, but it is not a kind of stuff and nor is it extended. — Bartricks
Are you familiar with special relativity as well as vector analysis and Newtonian physics? I believe to understand special relativity you have to understand vectors and also Newtonian physics. — christian2017
Physicists are not investigating what time is. That's not a question in physics. How it behaves, yes. What it is, no. That's a philosophical question. You have to use your reason to figure out the answer. — Bartricks
There is a great deal of empirical evidence that the speed of light is a universal constant obeyed by everything in the universe; we have been measuring it for 100s of years and we currently know it within a measurement uncertainty of 4 parts per billion.
Saying the statement "nothing travels faster than light" is about the language of physics seems to me to be equivalent to saying the statement is a natural law — Devans99
The language of physics is our model of natural laws after all - so I maintain a belief that the natural laws of the universe are time-aware. .This suggests time is more than just a human invention. — Devans99
No I am not because those are not theses about what time is, but about 'behaviour'.
For instance, a theory - no matter how complex - about how someone behaves, is not a theory about what a person is. — Bartricks
This kind of confusion - thinking that squarely philosophical questions are and have been answered by scientists - is, needless to say, rife. — Bartricks
Exactly what numbers are is itself a fraught philosophical issue, but no-one apart from a PLatonist thinks they're actual things, and even they would agree that the thing that is the number 7 - the Form of 7 - is not divisible. — Bartricks
1. If time is a dimension, then it extends to an actual infinity.
2. Nothing that exists is infinitely extended
3. Therefore, if time is a dimension, then it does not exist
4. Time exists
5. Therefore time is not a dimension — Bartricks
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