And yet it can be dealt with as a dimension in mathematics and physics and predict observed results. — John Gill
yet nothing that is infinitely divisible can exist in reality — Bartricks
Why not? Just curious. — John Gill
and it is manifest to reason that nothing can actually extend for infinity, or be composed of an actual infinity of parts. — Bartricks
Manifest=clear or obvious to the eye or mind. — John Gill
And does the eye or mind unravel every detail of the universe? If there are features of reality we cannot fathom does that negate their existence? — John Gill
What's a "stuff" and what's a "dimension." I think attempting to define things so basic to our experience like "time", "space" and my favorite "shape" doesn't lead anywhere. I think these are concepts that cannot be reduced to anything else. — khaled
which is why I don't think this discussion ever goes anywhere. — khaled
Time is what allows you to reflect on the past and plan for the future. — ovdtogt
It is not, I think, a kind of stuff or dimension. This is for numerous reasons. Conceived of as a stuff (or dimension, if dimensions are not stuff), it would be infinitely divisible, yet nothing that is infinitely divisible can exist in reality (yet time does exist, thus it is not a stuff/dimension).
Note too that the past is potentially infinite, as is the future. But if time is a kind of stuff or dimension, then it - the stuff itself - would have to extend infinitely otherwise how could any event in it recede potentially infinitely into the past? Yet nothing that is actually infinite can exist in reality (yet time does exist, thus time is not a stuff).
Finally - and I am not suggesting these exhaust the problems - there would be no fundamental difference between past, present and future. Indeed, there would not really be such properties, only early than and later than and simultaneous-with. But future past and present are essential to time - they 'are' the fundamental temporal properties - and they are radically distinct from each other (thus, time is not a stuff).
Time, then, is not a stuff, not a dimension. — Bartricks
Time is a human concept of convenience — sandman
Time is a human concept of convenience
— sandman
Yet there is a universal speed limit - the speed of light - and speed = distance / time, so it appears that something / some mechanism within the universe must be 'time-aware' else the speed limit could not be enforced - so time seems not just a human concept - it seems to be part of nature. — Devans99
For instance, can something exist that is infinitely extended? Well, no. For instance, when a position is shown to generate an infinite regress, we consider that a damning indictment of the view. Why? Because we - most of us - recognise that actual infinities cannot exist. — Bartricks
In which case "nothing travels faster than light" is a statement about the language of physics rather than a negative proposition about the world. — sime
We can roll it back so it retraces its course perfectly to it's starting position but even though the ball moved backwards in space, it can never move backwards in time for time has passed into the future between rolling the ball forwards and rolling it backwards. — TheMadFool
Nobody will object to space being infinite and if time is simply a higher dimensional space then there should be no problem in it being infinite. — TheMadFool
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