Surely it is self-evident that there is a difference between future and past. However, we cannot really claim to experience the future, and though we say we've experienced the past, it is not as the past that we've experienced it. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the question is what type of knowledge allows us to say that there is a difference between future and past... — Metaphysician Undercover
...or is there really no difference between them and what appears as extremely self-evident is just a deep delusion? — Metaphysician Undercover
In other words, we can't say that there's not the phenomenon of of an oasis in the desert if that occurs as an illusion. — Terrapin Station
f it "occurs as an illusion" (a conscious perception resulting in the misinterpretation of reality), the oasis is not a fact, it is a mirage. And in that case, it would be delusional to believe the mirage is an oasis. — Galuchat
.what type of knowledge allows us to say that there is a difference between future and past — Metaphysician Undercover
So the question is what type of knowledge allows us to say that there is a difference between future and past — Metaphysician Undercover
Empirical (experiential) knowledge (semantic information). — Galuchat
The past, as the determinate, is embedded in memory, whereas the future, as the indeterminate, is merely imagined. — Janus
What direction do you think we're pointed toward, the past or the future? If it's neither, then how can you call this an orientation? — Metaphysician Undercover
I didn't say we are oriented towards the past or the future; in the sense of being oriented to one and not the other. We are oriented towards both but in different ways. — Janus
What makes the memory of an event different from the anticipation of an event. — Metaphysician Undercover
what type of knowledge allows us to say that there is a difference between future and past — Metaphysician Undercover
I am never afraid of the past.What makes the memory of an event different from the anticipation of an event. — Metaphysician Undercover
We cannot definition-ally distinguish past-contingent propositions from future-contingent propositions on the basis of experiential content, unless we are prepared to bite the bullet and call a certain appearance "the past", such as the contents of a memory or photograph. But once we reject this as a mistake, as did Ayer, we realize we are then unable to provide an experiential distinction between past and future, even while we continue to insist on it. — sime
I would say that's contradictory. One cannot be oriented towards two opposing things, that's like saying you're oriented toward the east and toward the west, at the same time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can it be argued that the past and future modes of time can only be experienced by the person's imagination in the perpetually vanishing present mode of time; thereby seeming to indicate some sort of ontological priority of the present mode over the others? — charles ferraro
Are you honestly asking this? Your mind works so that you can't make out any distinction between memories of things that happened and imagining what might or will happen? — Terrapin Station
There seems to be past - present - future, as memory, sensation, and imagination. I suppose you privilege the present as all-encompassing, in that memory and imagined futures are also 'sensed' as 'present' — unenlightened
I am never afraid of the past. — unenlightened
Have I said that you could be oriented to both the past and the future "at the same time"? It's irrelevant to the argument. — Janus
If it's at different times, then what would separate one time from another time? What would constitute turning from being oriented to the past to being oriented to the future, and back and forth? It seems to me that such a back and forth would be a disorientation.
I don't think you can say that something is irrelevant to the argument until there is actually an argument. Did you present an argument? — Metaphysician Undercover
However, we cannot really claim to experience the future, and though we say we've experienced the past, it is not as the past that we've experienced it. So the question is what type of knowledge allows us to say that there is a difference between future and past, or is there really no difference between them and what appears as extremely self-evident is just a deep delusion? — Metaphysician Undercover
There seems to be past - present - future, as memory, sensation, and imagination. I suppose you privilege the present as all-encompassing, in that memory and imagined futures are also 'sensed' as 'present'
— unenlightened
Yes, I actually do privilege the present. That's because without the present, as the thing which separates or divides the future from the past, there could be no future or past. Also, I tend to think that it is impossible that the present could be a dimensionless dividing point, or else we couldn't exist in the present (as we are dimensional). So I believe that the present actually contains within it, some of the past, and some of the future, and this is why we have both memories and anticipations at the same time. — Metaphysician Undercover
Just as in 1914, the Brexit buildup is making calamity feel inevitable.
Even with a century of hindsight it is impossible to discern a point of no return, a junction at which all future paths, by whatever gradient or circuitous route, converged on disaster. If history doesn’t afford that view, how are we to know in real time when such a moment is close, or has been passed?...
...We are transfixed by frenzy on the stage before us: manoeuvres in anticipation of a no-confidence vote. We suppose that all possible routes are still open. Pro-Europeans must hope that there is a way back, that it is not a just a choice of gradient on the downward slide. Yet I sense fatalism creeping into formerly strident anti-Brexit voices. I glimpse shudders of dread that events are being driven not by the MPs who will vote in the coming weeks but by a critical mass of cowardice, ignorance and ideological prejudice that was reached months ago, maybe years.
The past is harrying the present.
— Rafael Behr
If I started having trouble remembering things this would make me afraid. But maybe this would just be a matter of being afraid of my future in demential state. — Metaphysician Undercover
I did not ask whether one can or cannot distinguish between memories and anticipations, I asked what makes one different from the other. — Metaphysician Undercover
Could you explain what you mean by "semantic information"? — Metaphysician Undercover
I presented a suggestion which you can take as an argument, that the experienced difference between our phenomenological orientations to past and future events, and the ways in which we can imagine logically elaborating that difference, give rise to the very recognition that there is past and future. How else would we arrive at such an idea? — Janus
You asked what type of knowledge allows us to differentiate between future and past.
Most people would say 'common sense' and experience. — Amity
Let me say it boldly; memory is time. — unenlightened
The only way it makes sense for you to wonder what makes one different from the other is if you can't distinguish them. Otherwise you'd know what makes one different from the other. That would be how you'd distinguish them. — Terrapin Station
You asked what type of knowledge allows us to differentiate between future and past.
Most people would say 'common sense' and experience.
— Amity
In the op I explained why we cannot refer to empirical knowledge to justify the claim of a difference between past and future. Perhaps it's "common sense", but what's that? — Metaphysician Undercover
You are missing the difference between using your senses and using your mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the question is what type of knowledge allows us to say that there is a difference between future and past, or is there really no difference between them and what appears as extremely self-evident is just a deep delusion? — Metaphysician Undercover
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