would such a progression of linear time to a conscious being allow them to understand its infinite nature though not being able experience infinity itself due to their limited timespan — invicta
Question: would such a progression of linear time to a conscious being allow them to understand its infinite nature though not being able experience infinity itself due to their limited timespan or would the experience of time standing still as it were during it’s progression constitute an understanding of infinity anyway of the infinite nature of time ? — invicta
By temporality I mean the passage of time and its experience….. — invicta
Question: would such a progression of linear time to a conscious being allow them to understand its infinite nature…. — invicta
Would you entertain the notion finite beings don’t experience the passage of time, but rather, only experience change? And even if change makes explicit successions in time relative to each other, it remains it is not time itself that is the object experienced. — Mww
if something like time cannot be measured can it be said to exist at all? — invicta
Our senses (…) are not anchored by a sense of time. We simply lack it hence us building clocks to tell its passage in a consistent way. — invicta
if space is removed from time then the notion of space loses meaning I’d say. — invicta
If the notion of space loses its meaning, how could you say one object is adjacent to, far from, or contained in, another? — Mww
Objects in space must also exist in time correct? — invicta
Take away time then WHEN does space exist ? — invicta
Without a when there is no material world….. — invicta
You’ve conflated the time of objects with the time of space — Mww
All when’s belong to rational agents. Without a when belonging to rational agents, there would be no material world for them, but that is not authority to deny the material world altogether. — Mww
Time exists regardless of rational agents, otherwise you’d claim nothing exists without rational conscious agents. — invicta
How could it possibly be comprehensible, that time exists without the intellect that uses it? — Mww
...would such a progression of linear time to a conscious being allow them to understand its infinite nature though not being able experience infinity itself due to their limited timespan — invicta
You might enjoy What's the big mystery about time?, in which that notion is taken to the cleaners.the two concepts of time and change are inseparable. — invicta
What I was referring to is seen in the Minkowski metric of spacetime, in which the time term is in fact a distance term c2(t1−t2)2−(x1−x2)2−(y1−y2)2−(z1−z2)2. — jgill
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