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
No, space-time is real--it is as it is regardless of what any individual mind or finite group of minds thinks about it.That's because "space-time" is purely conceptual. — Metaphysician Undercover
On the contrary, space-time is the continuous medium (reality) within which discrete things react and discrete events occur (existence).What is modeled is the way things behave, the way events occur. There's nothing about the model which says that space-time is something real. — Metaphysician Undercover
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
The issue is more contentious than that as perusing the physics stack exchange on the subject would show.↪prothero That's not true. For example, in QM the position and momentum of particles are continuous. Spacetime is also taken to be continuous, time is always taken to be a continuous parameter everywhere in physics. For all the effort out into making space or time discrete, such theories always turn out to be inconsistent somewhere. All (or nearly so) quantum mechanical theories treat spacetime as a continuous parameter, you'd have to go to something much more speculstive like loop quantum gravity to get a discrete structure. — MindForged
Can you (or anyone else) establish or change the properties of space-time just by thinking differently about them? Or is space-time something that we must investigate in order to ascertain what its properties are, regardless of what we think about it?That's your opinion. Got any support for that opinion? — Metaphysician Undercover
Sorry, that is not what it means to be a medium.Things themselves are the medium of separation between you and I. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's your opinion. Got any support for that opinion?The continuum is purely conceptual, it's our tool for measuring the discrete things which form the medium. — Metaphysician Undercover
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
Of course it is a concept, but the issue is whether it is "purely conceptual," as you claim. Why did it have to evolve? Because our understanding changed. Einstein had to think differently in order to resolve observed anomalies that were inconsistent with the thinking of his predecessors. Space-time always was and always will be as it is, regardless of how we think about it; our ultimate goal in studying it is to think about it correctly.Yes, it's an evolving concept. — Metaphysician Undercover
A medium cannot consist of discrete things or discrete events, because it is the environment in which those things react and events occur.What did you have in mind as a "medium"? — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree--but continuous space-time is the real environment in which those discrete things exist.Empirical evidence demonstrates to us that all which exists in the world is discrete things. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is the warrant for holding that whatever does not exist is necessarily conceptual, rather than real but in a different mode of being? 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?We conceive of continuities and continuums, but we never ever encounter such in the empirical world. So the evidence indicates that continuities and continuums are conceptual whereas the physical world consists of discrete things. — Metaphysician Undercover
Whats logical about ∞ + 1 = ∞ (implies 1 = 0)? — Devans99
So in that sense, time is as real as space.
11h — Devans99
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
When we're faced with the situation 4÷0 we don't say 0 is nonsense or illogical. Rather we tell ourselves that 0 is a ''special'' number that needs, well, ''special'' treatment. We then say 4÷0 is undefined.
Similarly, when we see ∞ + 1 = ∞, it doesn't mean 0=1. Infinity is a special number and normal arithmetic doesn't apply to it. — TheMadFool
Could time be like that? Measurable but not real. — TheMadFool
Could time be like that? Measurable but not real. — TheMadFool
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.It seems quite evident that all there is around discrete things is other discrete things. — Metaphysician Undercover
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.If there was such a medium, it would exist as an absolute, against which all the motions of things could be mapped, in an absolute way. — Metaphysician Undercover
All discrete things and events behave in a way which is consistent with the continuity of space-time. Since you deny this, further discussion would likely be a waste of time.No discrete things, or events, behave in a way which is consistent with continuity, that's a big problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
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
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.What is measured is the thing itself, and so it is said to have "extension" as extension is assigned to it through measurement. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not aware of any such premise. Relativity theory is the basis for the current scientific understanding of the space-time continuum.... relativity theory, which has a premise that denies the possibility that discrete thing exist in such a medium. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is nothing to warrant the assumption that discrete things can exist and interact without a continuous medium within which to do so.Discrete things do not exist in any medium. There is nothing to warrant that assumption. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not aware of any such evidence. I view the Planck length and Planck time as limitations on observation and measurement, not real discrete units of space-time.Fundamental particles do not behave in a way consistent with the continuity of space-time. — Metaphysician Undercover
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
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.However, the assumption of continuity creates problems like Zeno's paradoxes which demonstrate that the underlying reality is likely not continuous. — Metaphysician Undercover
I suspect that would be news to many physicists.Right, but the space-time continuum is understood by physicists as conceptual. — Metaphysician Undercover
Who said anything about the physical realm? This is conflating reality and existence again.There is no place in the physical realm for a continuous medium, or a need to assume one. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not aware of any reason to interpret them as inconsistent with the continuity of space-time.Are you unaware of the uncertainty principle, the measurement problem, and quantum entanglement? — Metaphysician Undercover
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
4÷0 does not make sense. How can you split 4 loafs into 0 parts? — Devans99
Right, it's part of the model, not what is modeled, that was my point. It's theoretical like a perfect circle is theoretical. So we could take a model of a perfect circle, and map real things against it like the orbits of the planets, and see how they vary from the perfect circle. The circle is conceptual, the orbits are real — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually, the model is deficient in its capacity to account for things like gravity and acceleration, so principles are added to allow for the model to be flexible. This gives the appearance that an aspect of the model, space-time is fluid, behaving. In reality the model just changes itself in an attempt to account for the things which it can't properly model. So if you happen to believe that space-time is a real entity, you'll believe that it changes according to those principles which have been added to allow for flexibility of the model. — Metaphysician Undercover
How do we invent a theory that doesn't inclide time?
Can you explain? Thanks. — TheMadFool
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
We have been over all of this before. Infinite divisibility is a red herring. Continuous motion through space-time is the fundamental reality. An interval of space does not consist of infinitely many discrete positions, and an interval of time does not consist of infinitely many discrete instants.However, continuity in the actual distance and time is assumed under the claim of infinite divisibility. The paradoxes are created by that assumption of continuity. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am telling you that I am not aware of any reason to interpret them as inconsistent with the continuity of space-time.Are you telling me that the observed behaviour of quantum particles which cannot be explained by the laws of physics, does not indicate to you that the behaviour of these discrete units is inconsistent with the continuity of space-time? — Metaphysician Undercover
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