RogueAI
DifferentiatingEgg
noAxioms
Yes. That's dilation, a coordinate effect. It means that from their frame, your mental song would be stretched out. 'Appear' is a loaded word since Doppler is relevant to appearances, but not relevant to time dilation. To cancel this out, I'm assuming this speedy person being observed is moving tangentially to your location.From my frame, would that mental “song” appear stretched out in time? — RogueAI
There are no outside observers, at least not in the sense of outside of spacetime.Would it unfold more slowly to an outside observer, similar to time dilation effects?
If he's moving directly towards you, Doppler effect is stronger than dilation, and his process would appear to be faster than yours. This has fooled even professional astronomers who have measured objects moving towards us to appear to be reducing the distance to us at a rate greater than c. That's Doppler effect.And would anything like a Doppler-style distortion apply
Imagined music is just another process that takes time, same as say watching a clock. Humans are in no way special in how relativity treats any observed process.I’m trying to understand how (or whether) relativity meaningfully applies to subjective mental events like imagined music, not just external physical actions.
It is expressed as a speed (not a velicity, which is frame dependent, even for light). Yes, it's a constant, and relativity theory posits (without proof) that light moves at this speed relative to any inertial frame. Note 'inertial': It can moves at different speed relative to non-inertial frames, so say light sent to the moon and back (they have reflectors up there for that) does so at slightly faster than c as measured by us.the "Speed" of light isn't actually a speed, but rather a constant. — DifferentiatingEgg
True under Newtonian physics, but not relativity. The speeds you mention are so slow that it's really close to 410, but not exactly.Speeds are additive, me jogging 10 miles an hour on an airplane that's traveling 400 miles an hour makes my total speed 410 mph relative to some point on Earth.
This is flat out wrong, in any frame. It moves locally at c relative to you, the plane, or the ground.If you flash a light while jogging 10 mph on an airplane going 400 mph, the speed the light travels is actually still just c (the constant of light) -410 mph (to adjust for the base speed relative to the constant)
Janus
I’m trying to understand how (or whether) relativity meaningfully applies to subjective mental events like imagined music, not just external physical actions. — RogueAI
Suppose I could somehow observe their inner mental activity directly. — RogueAI
DifferentiatingEgg
noAxioms
Normal means what the first postulate of relativity means: All the normal laws apply in any inertial frame, which means there cannot be a local test for your motion. So regardless of where you are or how you're moving, everything appears 'normal' to you. Yes, time phenomenally appears to flow at its normal 1 second per second, for everybody.What does "normal" mean? That it flows at its normal 1 second per second rate? — RogueAI
Since time is part of the universe (and not something that contains the universe), the God view isn't in time at all, and thus there is no perception of change anywhere. Also, since light cannot leave the universe, none of it gets to this god, so it isn't especially a 'view' in the sense that we have one.I'm pretending we have a God's-eye view outside of space-time. — RogueAI
I think the sort of dualism you suggest here is incompatible with relativity theory, which blatantly says that you can't tell if you're 'moving fast'. For instance, relativity says that if you fall into a large black hole, you cannot tell when you've crossed the event horizon. What you're suggesting is more like the experience of your body stopping as all physical processes come to a halt as the EH is approached. This would falsify all of 20th century physics, requiring a 3rd interpretation. Not even the absolutists predict that experience, regardless of one's philosophy of mind.If mental processes are independent of neural processes then they ought to be unaffected by the relativity of velocities. — Janus
I agree, but based my reply on an assumption of mental states being in sync with (if not just being) neural states. If they're two different things that got out of sync, there would be a test for absolute motion. Your arms would be hard to move. You'd not be able to understand speech. You'd probably die if your mental states are in any way involved in life support, like say choosing to eat.The idea of someone observing someone else's subjective sense of time makes no sense.
That's not how time dilation works.what I'm saying is the light is not going at c+410 mph. That's how time dialtion works... — DifferentiatingEgg
AmadeusD
If mental processes are independent of neural processes then they ought to be unaffected by the relativity of velocities. If they are not independent of neural states then they ought to be affected. — Janus
Corvus
I’m trying to understand how (or whether) relativity meaningfully applies to subjective mental events like imagined music, not just external physical actions. — RogueAI
DifferentiatingEgg
adjust for the base speed relative to the constant — DifferentiatingEgg
Janus
I think the sort of dualism you suggest here is incompatible with relativity theory, which blatantly says that you can't tell if you're 'moving fast'. For instance, relativity says that if you fall into a large black hole, you cannot tell when you've crossed the event horizon. What you're suggesting is more like the experience of your body stopping as all physical processes come to a halt as the EH is approached. This would falsify all of 20th century physics, requiring a 3rd interpretation. Not even the absolutists predict that experience, regardless of one's philosophy of mind. — noAxioms
I agree, but based my reply on an assumption of mental states being in sync with (if not just being) neural states. If they're two different things that got out of sync, there would be a test for absolute motion. Your arms would be hard to move. You'd not be able to understand speech. You'd probably die if your mental states are in any way involved in life support, like say choosing to eat. — noAxioms
Corvus
Why not? it's like when you play a 45 at 33 1/3. — Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
Replayed songs are physical — Corvus
But you cannot access the other folks mind, hence you wouldn't know what song is being played in his/her mind. — Corvus
RogueAI
isn't the firing of neurons, which constitutes the playing of the song in the mind, something physical as well? It doesn't happen at the speed of light, because it occurs through a physical medium. So wouldn't time dilation slow down that activity? — Metaphysician Undercover
SophistiCat
Yes, I agree that dualism is unsupportable. If we were traveling at speed close to c, aging of our bodies and all its physical processes would, according to the theory, greatly slow down. If our minds were independent of, and unaffected by, physical processes, and proceeding at their "normal" rate, then our subjective experience of mental processes would, presumably, seem vastly speeded up, which seems absurd. — Janus
Corvus
The problem is we don't know if the firing of neurons are the playing of the songs in the mind. If they are, still we don't know which neurons and what type of firing are related to the song playing, in what manner and ways.isn't the firing of neurons, which constitutes the playing of the song in the mind, something physical as well? It doesn't happen at the speed of light, because it occurs through a physical medium. So wouldn't time dilation slow down that activity? — Metaphysician Undercover
Again, there is no concrete evidence or working details proving the observed neural activity is the person's playing the song. Isn't it your imagination which links the neural activity to the song in your friend's mind? It is possible to imagine it of course, but it is not demonstrable or provable with intelligible evidence, is it?and you observe the corresponding neural activity. Then, whenever you see an exact replication of that physical activity you know the person plays that song. — Metaphysician Undercover
Banno
From their frame of reference it's you who is traveling close to the speed of light. Are your thought processes slowed in respect to the movement of your body?If someone were traveling close to the speed of light relative to me... — RogueAI
Janus
noAxioms
Many of the posters are presuming absolute frames: Not sure if RogueAI is one of them since he at least added 'relative to me'.You continue to suppose some frame of reference that is stationary in an absolute sense. — Banno
...the closer to the constant the less time you experience. — DifferentiatingEgg
If we were traveling at speed close to c, ... — Janus
... invoke a similar effect to close-to-light-speed travel. — AmadeusD
It doesn't happen at the speed of light, because — Metaphysician Undercover
I had in mind the commonly imagined sci-fi scenario, where you aretraveling at close to the speed of light and all processes. including bodily processes, are slowed down such that you are aging much more slowly than those who remain on Earth. — Janus
sci-fi scenario, where you aretraveling at close to the speed of light — Janus
At any given time, we are moving at a speed close to c in some reference frame. — SophistiCat
From their frame of reference it's you who is traveling close to the speed of light. — Banno
Not directly, sure, but you still have indirect access. Supposedly a person could be doing the Macarena dance to the music playing only in their mind. Positing that they would not be in sync is preposterous (try it). So given correlation, yes, you have indirect access to the tune in somebody's mind.Suppose I could somehow observe their inner mental activity directly. Imagine they’re playing a song in their head — RogueAI
Not possible thing to do. The premise is false. Not accepted. — Corvus
Under certain dualist views, the firing of neurons does not constitute mental song playing. They're correlated, but supposedly not causal.isn't the firing of neurons, which constitutes the playing of the song in the mind, something physical as well? — Metaphysician Undercover
It really doesn't matter. All neural activity is subject to physical time treatment of relativity.The problem is we don't know if the firing of neurons are the playing of the songs in mind. — Corvus
Yes, I agree that dualism is unsupportable. — Janus
Under property dualism, mental activity is just a different property of normal matter, which is subject to relativistic effects. Under substance dualism, where the substance is something in the vicinity of the being experienced, it moves, and thus the same rules apply. So what does that leave? If the mind is totally external to the universe (BiV for instance, several forms of 'souls', etc), the mind is external to the universe, and works more like a moving spotlight in that which it experiences. But such a view is necessarily either solipsistic or epiphenomenal since one cannot stay in sync with other minds. Contradictions abound, but not under most forms of dualism.If mental processes are independent of neural processes then they ought to be unaffected by the relativity of velocities. — Janus
This violates all the premises of relativity, which states that you experience the same flow of time regardless of your motion, which is always by definition stationary in one's own frame.That's how time dialtion works... the closer to the constant the less time you experience. — DifferentiatingEgg
I'm suspecting you don't know the difference between speed and velocity since the statement makes no sense.Light isn't technically a speed because you don't use velocity. — DifferentiatingEgg
Again, the ship is always stationary in its own frame, and while inertial, it is the Earth inhabitants that age more slowly. The reason it works out is because the ship is not always inertial, so it takes a shorter path (intervals as integrated along all the relevant worldlines) through spacetime than does Earth.I had in mind the commonly imagined sci-fi scenario, where you are traveling at close to the speed of light and all processes. including bodily processes, are slowed down such that you are aging much more slowly than those who remain on Earth. — Janus
Banno
Such an observation would be mediated by a signal from observed to observer. That signal is either subject to the Lorentz transformation, in which case the time dilation takes effect, or it isn't, in which case there is an absolute frame of reference.Suppose I could somehow observe their inner mental activity directly. — RogueAI
Janus
Nothing has a traveling speed. Speed is relative to something else. Every object is stationary in its own frame. Earth is traveling at near c relative to the object I mentioned in my prior post, and yet you don't experience time running slow, which would be a violation of the first premise of relativity, and also a violation of the premises (whatever they are) of an absolutist interpretation such as LET. — noAxioms
So what does that leave? If the mind is totally external to the universe (BiV for instance, several forms of 'souls', etc), the mind is external to the universe, and works more like a moving spotlight in that which it experiences. — noAxioms
Again, the ship is always stationary in its own frame, and while inertial, it is the Earth inhabitants that age more slowly. The reason it works out is because the ship is not always inertial, so it takes a shorter path (intervals as integrated along all the relevant worldlines) through spacetime than does Earth. — noAxioms
Banno
The theory says that if you traveled at the speed of light to some distant star and then returned, those on Earth would have aged much more than you. In that scenario Earth is the stationary, "normal" frame and the starship the one at great speed relative to it. — Janus
Janus
If someone were traveling close to the speed of light relative to me, special relativity says their physical processes would appear slowed down from my frame — movements, reactions, even neural activity. That part makes sense when thinking about observable behavior. — RogueAI
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