Well, that, nothing to spacetime, cannot happen. I think we agree that spacetime is a substance. — MoK
What is before the beginning of time and nothing to something are sides of the same coin. It is not proper to say what is before the beginning of time since there is no time before the beginning of time. — MoK
P1: T ↔ C — Bob Ross
I suspect it's an implication - "if there is a change then there is a passage of time" or some such. — Banno
I think you've made a pretty good argument so far, but here is where you're stuck. I think its fine to call spacetime a substance, but plugging it into the argument we haven't proven that spacetime cannot come from nothing. We never noted that substances couldn't come from nothing, only that they needed spacetime. Saying, "Nothing to spacetime cannot happen" is the conclusion, so we can't use it as a premise. We have to have true premises that necessarily lead to the conclusion being true, without the premises needing the conclusion to be true. — Philosophim
There is simply no point before the beginning of time so we cannot say what is before the beginning of time. Think of the beginning of time as a solid and impenetrable wall. We cannot get through this wall and ask what is before. In fact, we are committing an error in saying what is before the beginning of time since before indicates the existence of a time before the beginning of time. This time however does not exist since we are talking about the beginning of time.Here you run into another problem. If there is no time before the beginning of time (spacetime), then what is there? There can't be something that's different from spacetime because you required that spacetime exist for change to happen. And you can't have infinitely regressive time as you've already ruled that out. The only option left is that nothing was before spacetime. — Philosophim
P1) Time is needed for change
P2) There is no change when there is no time (From P1) (HP)
P3) Nothing to something needs a change in nothing (HP)
P4) There is no time in nothing
C1) Therefore, change in nothing is not possible (From P2 and P4)
C2) Therefore, nothing to something is not possible (from P3 and C1) — MoK
The idea of 'nothing', especially in regard to 'something' is complicated because it combines the mathematical with the linguistic. At its basis, the mathematics of nothing is zero; but how it comes into play linguistically conceptually may be more complex. — Jack Cummins
I see what you mean.Nothing to something is F, change is C, nothing is n, time is t.
P1) ∀x(C(x) → t)
P2 is a repetition of P1. — Lionino
Thank you very much for putting in the effort to convert my pseudo-syllogism into a syllogism.P3) ∀x(F(x) → C(x))
P4) n → ¬t
C1)
C2) ¬∃x(F(x))
This the best that I managed after a few tries, but I can't write C1, so C2 is likely troublesome too. — Lionino
T ← C. — Lionino
OK, this is the last arrow in my quiver: Any theory in which time is an emergent property within must be a dynamical theory (for example the theory that explains nothing to spacetime). Time however is the main variable in any dynamical theory. This means that time has to be emergent and at the same time the main variable of such a theory. This is however problematic since time is required for the emergence of time. — MoK
There is simply no point before the beginning of time so we cannot say what is before the beginning of time. Think of the beginning of time as a solid and impenetrable wall. We cannot get through this wall and ask what is before. In fact, we are committing an error in saying what is before the beginning of time since before indicates the existence of a time before the beginning of time. — MoK
But, in the absence of further clarification, I Understand ↪MoK to be making the claim that time is necessary and sufficient for change, hence T ≡ C. — Banno
Logic does not allow us to derive anything that is not in the assumptions, and hence logic alone cannot deduce the existence of god or of a first cause or of something never coming from nothing. — Banno
Spacetime is a substance and has a curvature around massive objects. Spacetime can affect the motion of any other objects so in this sense it exists and has a property, its curvature. — MoK
I think the correct statement is that time is necessary for change. By this, I mean that there cannot be any change if there is no time.We don't usually write the implication backwards. C ⊃ T.
But, in the absence of further clarification, I Understand ↪MoK to be making the claim that time is necessary and sufficient for change, hence T ≡ C. — Banno
You are correct. Time can pass without any change (for example in the state of heat death).I think this an incorrect assumption, and that time can pass without change. — Banno
Thanks. I get your point. I couldn't argue anything without those premises.But again, I think the whole framing of this issue here is misguided. Logic does not allow us to derive anything that is not in the assumptions, and hence logic alone cannot deduce the existence of god or of a first cause or of something never coming from nothing. A logic does not have ontological implications outside of whatever presumptions that logic makes.
Logic is just a way of talking clearly. — Banno
Ok, I can simplify this even further. I think we can agree that spacetime is necessary for change. I think we can agree that nothing to spacetime is a change as well. This means that we need spacetime for this change, nothing to spacetime. But there is no spacetime in nothing therefore nothing to spacetime is not possible.Trying to throw in some extra vocabulary doesn't solve the issue. Lord knows its a common tactic among many on the forums. :D We should be able to explain everything in simple terms. Simply put, if your conclusion is part of your premises "that something cannot emerge within nothing" then its not a viable argument. Remember as well, time cannot exist on its own, so we always have to be referencing spacetime as well. Spacetime is a substance, not emergent. — Philosophim
Well, non. :) I said before that nothing to something and nothing is before the beginning of time are sides of a coin. If we accept that there is nothing before the beginning of time then it follows that nothing to something is possible. That is what I am trying to prove, nothing to something is not possible. So if we agree that nothing to something is not possible then it follows that it is improper to say that there was nothing before the beginning of time.Again, the added vocabulary and sentence structure does not negate the simple fact. There was either something, or nothing. If you claim we cannot reference before spacetime, that means there was nothing before spacetime. If you claim spacetime always existed, then we have an infinite regress. There is no third option, just a desire that we not pick one of the two. 'Nothing' and 'something' are binaries. If there is not something, there is nothing. If there is not nothing, there is something. — Philosophim
Well, that is a lot of reading but here you go (what I quote and write may be enough):Please provide a link to this information. As far as I know it is nothing but a concept used to refer to points in time in space. But I an interested in viewing anything you have to further my knowledge. — Sir2u
General relativity is a theory of gravitation developed by Albert Einstein between 1907 and 1915. The theory of general relativity says that the observed gravitational effect between masses results from their warping of spacetime.
Gravitational waves were later predicted in 1916 by Albert Einstein on the basis of his general theory of relativity as ripples in spacetime. Gravitational waves transport energy as gravitational radiation, a form of radiant energy similar to electromagnetic radiation.
Ok, I can simplify this even further. I think we can agree that spacetime is necessary for change. I think we can agree that nothing to spacetime is a change as well. This means that we need spacetime for this change, nothing to spacetime. — MoK
So if we agree that nothing to something is not possible then it follows that it is improper to say that there was nothing before the beginning of time. — MoK
We have to agree whether nothing to spacetime is a change or not. Yes or no?No, I don't think so because what you've concluded is that we need spacetime for other changes besides spacetime. You haven't proven that spacetime itself cannot come from nothing. We could also say change must involve spacetime. Nothing to something is a change, and it involves spacetime. — Philosophim
Actually, I have two strategies to argue that it is improper to say what is before the beginning of time: (1) There is no point before the beginning of time. If there was such a point then it means that spacetime exists before the beginning of time so what we assume as the beginning of time is not the beginning of time and (2) Nothing to something is impossible which is the subject of discussion.This is assuming the conclusion is assuming the conclusion is true. This is classical logical fallacy called "Begging the question". If the only way your premises work is if you assume the conclusion is true, then nothing has been proven.
I think it was a good start, but you've reached the logical end with the premises and definitions you've put forth. I'm not saying you shouldn't keep trying, but at this point you'll need a new tact. Either new definitions, or a revision of premises is required. — Philosophim
We have to agree whether nothing to spacetime is a change or not. Yes or no? — MoK
(1) There is no point before the beginning of time. — MoK
If there was such a point then it means that spacetime exists before the beginning of time so what we assume as the beginning of time is not the beginning of time — MoK
(2) Nothing to something is impossible which is the subject of discussion. — MoK
I'm having a bit of difficulty in bringing out the validity of the OP. Three assumptions and a conclusion - something is usually missing, or superfluous.
I had a go at parsing the argument in to something that was valid, but I can't see it.
Anyone? — Banno
Well, if nothing to spacetime is a change then we need spacetime for it! That is true since spacetime is necessary for any change.Yes. :) And the above still applies. — Philosophim
No, please see below.If there is no point prior to spacetime (remember, you noted earlier time cannot exist alone, its a property of spacetime) then there is nothing. — Philosophim
True, and that is the problem. Saying that nothing exists before the beginning of time assumes that there is a point at which nothing exists at that point.But spacetime is a substance, and has the property of time. You can't say spacetime existed before time. — Philosophim
Let's see how our debate proceeds in regards to nothing to something is impossible.Right, but as its been noted, that's your conclusion. If you assume the conclusion is true, you haven't proven the conclusion is true. Its just a belief at that point.
With how you've defined everything, you've worked yourself into a corner. You can't have something before spacetime, which means that nothing was before spacetime. And you can't have infinite amount of time that has passed prior to now, which means spacetime couldn't have always existed. But keep trying! — Philosophim
P1) Time is needed for change
P2) Nothing to something needs a change in nothing (HP)
P3) There is no time in nothing
C1) Therefore, change in nothing is not possible (From P1 and P3)
C2) Therefore, nothing to something is not possible (from P2 and C1) — MoK
Well, this has proved to be a contentious issue, which is to me somewhat puzzling. There are plenty of folk hereabouts who will agree with you, but I am not one. I see no reason not to say that changes can occur across distances, as well as times. And I think the mathematics and physics back up this approach, since we can calculate change over distance (Δx/Δy) for various things, and we have the physics of statics, Hook's law and so on.I think the correct statement is that time is necessary for change. By this, I mean that there cannot be any change if there is no time. — MoK
Cheers.I get your point. — MoK
(I have a hunch that the "set of all sets that don't contain themselves" may trip me up here). — Dawnstorm
Well, if nothing to spacetime is a change then we need spacetime for it! That is true since spacetime is necessary for any change. — MoK
But spacetime is a substance, and has the property of time. You can't say spacetime existed before time.
— Philosophim
True, and that is the problem. Saying that nothing exists before the beginning of time assumes that there is a point at which nothing exists at that point. — MoK
But ~∃x (x) is not well-formed - it doesn't say anything.
And ~∃x (Exists<x>)?
The thing about parsing is that one has to be specific about what one means, and that is absent in the OP.
Time is not ontological entity. Time is epistemic entity.
That doesn’t make any sense, unless you are just conveying that time is just the form of experience. — Bob Ross
It says what it means. It is a simple and clear statement which reflects the nature of time. I am not sure if it needs explanation.
□∀M -> □∃T
∃M1t1∃M2t2 →□Ag,T,M
I don’t know what this is supposed to be conveying. — Bob Ross
M = Motion
t = time
Ag = agent
P1) Time is needed for change
P2) There is no change when there is no time (From P1) (HP)
P3) Nothing to something needs a change in nothing (HP)
P4) There is no time in nothing
C1) Therefore, change in nothing is not possible (From P2 and P4)
C2) Therefore, nothing to something is not possible (from P3 and C1)
Secondly, I think you are thinking that nothing being unrestrained by time entails it cannot spontaneously be involved with temporal sequences, which doesn’t necessarily follow. I don’t see why one would believe that. — Bob Ross
I cannot follow you here. Do you mind elaborating?
(1) Time is needed for any change and (2) Time is a substance.
I reject 2.
2) According to general relativity, time is a component of spacetime. Spacetime is a substance though. By substance, I mean something that exists and has a set of properties. Spacetime's property is its curvature. Two phenomena confirm that spacetime is a substance or in other words confirm general relativity, namely gravitational wave and gravitational lens.
Is says “there does not exist any proposition x, such that is it true”; — Bob Ross
How would you know if something is an entity without knowing what it is?There cannot be such a thing as a ‘epistemic entity’ because it is, when taken literally, a contradiction in terms: an entity implies something within the ontology of reality, and epistemology pertains solely to knowledge (and specifically not ontology). — Bob Ross
That is not propositional logic. It is an EL (Epistemic Logic) operator which means, Agent "knows". It could have been "K" for knows in general, but the box implies knowing via observation.Ok, so ‘□∀M -> □∃T’ is ‘it is necessary that every motion is ??? and that entails that it is necessary that there exists a time”. That doesn’t make any sense to me. — Bob Ross
If there was Motion1 to Motion2 with time1 to time2, then the Agent knows Time generated from the Motion via Observation. This is what it means.‘∃M1t1∃M2t2 →□Ag,T,M’ means ‘there exists a motion and time such that there exists another motion and time’ and that entails ‘it is necessary that there is an agento, time, and motion’. Again, I don’t know what this is trying to convey. — Bob Ross
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