How could deny change as a mere concept? It exists in the natural world. Are you an idealist?No. I was suggesting time is a concept. It is a way to describe changes, motions, movements, and durations and intervals too. — Corvus
Time does not cause a change. It allows the change.Because time is a concept, it cannot cause any physical objects or events to change. It can only capture them in perception, and describe them. — Corvus
No, physical changes take place in continuous time.The physical changes take place in a slice of moment, where the cause and effect co-exist in the window of the change. — Corvus
You are mixing psychological time with subjective time. There is also objective time.Lumping them altogether, and seeing them as process or continuity would be categorical illusion from the latent memory in the brain. — Corvus
Change was not denied here. The actual change itself cannot be captured by physics and math. That was an assumption. No denial.How could deny change as a mere concept? It exists in the natural world. Are you an idealist? — MoK
No, I am not an idealist. I think I told you before, but you seem to have forgotten already. I am a bundle of perception.Are you an idealist? — MoK
No. Again wrong. Time is a concept. Time doesn't allow anything. Change and motion can be described in time.Time does not cause a change. It allows the change. — MoK
That is an illusion from your latent memory. Change takes place in an instance physics and math cannot describe, capture or understand. The moment of change takes place in co-existing moment of unchanged state and change.No, physical changes take place in continuous time. — MoK
What is the difference between psychological time and subjective time? Can you mix time? Time is not liquid or powder. You cannot mix time.You are mixing psychological time with subjective time. There is also objective time. — MoK
I never claimed time doesn't exist. Your perception seems not quite accurate here. The OP wrote it as a suggestion for discussions and consideration.For my point there, any common sense use of the word will do. You cannot claim the time does not exist (or is not real) merely because people can fail to recognize it as such: that's a bad argument, and that is exactly what you are doing when you bring up indigenous people who fail to understand that they age. — Bob Ross
That doesn't prove time is real or time exists. You just keep saying the content of your perception as if they are time. Time is a concept.Beyond that point of contention, I would say that what is real and what exist are different; because there are things which have being but are not a member of reality (e.g., the feeling of pain, the phenomenal color of orange, a thought, the a priori concept of quantity, etc.). — Bob Ross
I never claimed time doesn't exist.
Time doesn't exist. Only space and objects exist.
Time is a concept.
You cannot say time is real. It would be like saying water is real. Water is hot or cold, not real or unreal.
Concepts are not real or unreal
You either know a concept or you don't know it.
What do you mean by trivially true? Why is it trivially true?Of course, not, but that is trivially true...so what? — Janus
Isn't it obvious? Imagination is a mental operation which is one of the functions of mind. How else would you imagine something without mind?It says nothing about the ability of a mind to imagine anything. — Janus
Why do you think it is funny that you cannot tell the difference between a conclusion and assumption (suggestion)? The conclusion has not been agreed yet in this thread. We are still in the middle of the debate on the conclusion.I never claimed time doesn't exist.
This is a joke right?: — Bob Ross
Something is real, if there are also fakes of the thing. Have you seen fake water? Have you seen or heard of fake time?Water is definitely real: no one disputes that. To say it is not real, is to say that it does not exist in reality. You deny that water exists in reality??? — Bob Ross
What do you mean by trivially true? Why is it trivially true? — Corvus
It says nothing about the ability of a mind to imagine anything.
— Janus
Isn't it obvious? Imagination is a mental operation which is one of the functions of mind. How else would you imagine something without mind? — Corvus
The point here was about logic, but you seem to talking about your own imagination. Anyhow this is not even main topic in this thread. Please refrain from posting off-topic trivialities.Anyway, I know my mind can imagine a world without minds,. — Janus
Should it not be self-pity on your part? :lol:and if yours cannot imagine a world without minds then I can only pity you. — Janus
The point here was about logic, — Corvus
You may well be right that this last is false. But it is not what is being suggested. — Banno
So, do you agree that change is real? If change is real then what is the subject to change?Change was not denied here. — Corvus
Correct. We however experience change. It is through the experience that we act accordingly. For example, do you step into the street when you see a car moving very fast in the street and it will hit you if you step into the street?The actual change itself cannot be captured by physics and math. — Corvus
How could you have any perception? Are you denying that you have a brain and your perception is due to physical processes in your brain?No, I am not an idealist. I think I told you before, but you seem to have forgotten already. I am a bundle of perception. — Corvus
So you are confirming what I said and at the same time saying what I said is wrong!No. Again wrong. Time is a concept. Time doesn't allow anything. Change and motion can be described in time. — Corvus
So do you step into the street when you see a car moving very fast and it will hit you if you step into the street?That is an illusion from your latent memory. — Corvus
I already discuss that. What you are referring to is a simultaneous process. There cannot be any change in a simultaneous process.Change takes place in an instance physics and math cannot describe, capture or understand. The moment of change takes place in co-existing moment of unchanged state and change. — Corvus
Subjective time allows physical change whereas psychological time regulates our subjective experiences.What is the difference between psychological time and subjective time? — Corvus
Sorry, I mean you are confusing the subjective time with psychological time.Can you mix time? Time is not liquid or powder. You cannot mix time. — Corvus
So, do you agree that change is real? If change is real then what is the subject to change? — MoK
How could you have any perception? Are you denying that you have a brain and your perception is due to physical processes in your brain? — MoK
So you are confirming what I said and at the same time saying what I said is wrong! — MoK
So do you step into the street when you see a car moving very fast and it will hit you if you step into the street? — MoK
I already discuss that. What you are referring to is a simultaneous process. There cannot be any change in a simultaneous process. — MoK
Subjective time allows physical change whereas psychological time regulates our subjective experiences. — MoK
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