By "semi-(in)determinate" I basically wanted to emphasize that not all future events are fully indeterminate. — javra
That's right there is a fundamental continuity, expressed in a very simply form as Newton's first law, inertia, which makes future events somewhat determinate. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here's the basic problem with "force". By Newton's fist law, a force is what interrupts the continuity of predictability. In Newton's second law, the force itself is described as being predictable according to the principles of the first law. However, the predictability of the force itself may be interrupted by another force. This produces a potential infinite regress, exposing a fundamental indeterminateness. This indeterminateness indicates that we do not really understand the nature of force. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think Entropy provides us with a principle to distinguish between future and past. — Metaphysician Undercover
It may distinguish between before and after, but this is insufficient to distinguish future from past. — Metaphysician Undercover
I conceptualize it differently. Something more akin to stratifications along a determinancy-indeterminacy spectrum. But I greatly doubt I'd be able to properly explain myself in the soundbite form that forum discussions require. — javra
Why not? Please explain.
In the OP you asked "what type of knowledge allows us to say that there is a difference between future and past" not for "a principle". Entropy isn't merely "a principle" but a physical theory (re: statistical mechanics, thermodynamics, information theory ...) — 180 Proof
Btw, MU, stating that entropy (which describes the disordering of closed systems) can "distinguish between before and after" - that is, relations among discrete system-states [micro] - seems to entail differentiated magnitudes, or degrees, of disorder of closed systems in their entirety [macro], wherein Minimum Disorder corresponds to "past" and Maximum Disorder to "future" (i.e. Arrow of Time); and so, for consistency's sake, either entropy is "insufficient" for both - this I hope you'll explain - or sufficient for both (in different ways) which is epistemologically warranted (e.g. beginning with what I've sketched here). — 180 Proof
But don't you agree that the determinacy of the future is distinct from the determinacy of the past, being grounded or justified in a different way? — Metaphysician Undercover
And since things are caused to change, determinacy of the future is made complex by the need to understand causation.
Both forms of determinacy are complicated, but they are made complicated by different elements. So we cannot make one determinacy-indeterminacy spectrum, we would need two, one relating to the past and one to the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
Doesn't 'knowledge' itself presuppose "a difference between past and future"?
Also, more precisely, the empirical / computational concept of Entropy ... :death: — 180 Proof
In the context of your full reply, its almost a trick question for me: yes when addressed epistemologically, but no when addressed ontologically - ontologically they're two different facets of the same overall process. — javra
If we are to address the present epistemologically, the present is that portion of time in which we (in part) hold direct awareness of everything that is not past and future. I’ve bracketed “in part” because, on one hand, the present is also where we intend things (with intentions always extending toward the future) as well as – hopefully not making this overly complex – being a time-span during which we are also aware of the past (memories) and the future (expectations). Still, when I’m aware of a bird chirp in the present, for example, this awareness pertains to neither the past nor the future. — javra
You see an oasis in the dessert; at this moment, your drinking of water in a little while (the future) is plausible because the present experience currently isn't contradicotry to the past. But once you arrive there and there is only sand, you now know that the experience of the oasis was only a mirage - because this conclusion is now the only one that is not contradicotory to the entirety of your solidified past. — javra
And entropy determines the direction of the arrow of time, the notion of which is intelligible only in terms of past and future. — Janus
I think that this is demonstrably false. Entropy and the arrow of time are compatible with eternalism. "Past and future" only have meaning in relation to the present, and the present is not compatible with eternalism. Therefore entropy and the arrow of time do not rely on past and future for intelligibility. As I explained, they are based in before and after, which is distinct from future and past. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't completely agree with this, because I don't see how you jump to the position of drawing any conclusions about the present. The point of the thread was to approach the present from the position of recognizing a difference between future and past. When it becomes necessary to conclude that there is a difference between these, then the conclusion of a present, as necessary to complete the separation between them becomes justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
What it says is that the world is such, or the reality of being, existence, is such that we can make true and false statements concerning events of the past, but we cannot make true or false statements concerning events of the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't agree that eternalism denies the phenomenological temporal movement which is understood in terms of past, present and future. — Janus
Change is temporal movement, which we conceptualize as past, present and future. — Janus
...the present is where change happens, no not static... — Janus
For example, if we take a point in time two years ago, there is a before and after relative to that point. We cannot convert this before and after into past and future though, because "past and future" implies "the present" as the dividing point. And, it is quite obvious that this is inconsistent with the premise which clearly states a point in time two years ago. It's very clear that to call this point in time two years ago "the present" is a falsity. — Metaphysician Undercover
The issue, as I explained to 180 is that the understanding of past present and future does not produce any understanding of temporal movement. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no "static present", really, for us, there is just past and future in the sense that we cannot speak about the present until it is past. — Janus
"static present" — Janus
So in summary, there is a static present but it's not perceivable from within the frame of reference; so if you were to slightly edit your claim as 'static presenting' then I would be inclined to agree. — Shamshir
I would agree, that it is not perceivable.There is no "static present", really, for us — Janus
The only inconsistency (or incoherence), MU, is you refering to the Past "two years Ago" which is synomous with two years Before "the present" yet dissociating Before and After from Past and Future. You use the former in terms of the latter, MU. Res ipsa locquitur. Saying "We cannot convert this before and after into past and future" is ... nonsense. — 180 Proof
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