haon14
Greenlighter
Concretely(sp?) speaking, now is meeting of time and space. A point at which the two collide. Every "now" is different and unique. And in reality as we view it, there is an infinite number, none of them being equal.
Concretely(sp?) speaking, now is meeting of time and space. A point at which the two collide. Every "now" is different and unique. And in reality as we view it, there is an infinite number, none of them being equal.
there is not even such a concept as "the same place"there will never be a person who's been in the same exact place at the same exact time as i have
YES! EXACTLY! That is what I was trying to say...That is one of the MAJOR implications of relativity. They are completely entangled. The only way to quantify space is by the velocity over time. You can just as easily reverse that and have time=velocity over distance and velocity= time over distance. You can not really have any of those concepts stand on their on their own in a meaningful way.Your guys' posts are still making me gravitate towards the idea that time and space are one in the same or closely linked. ^what you said... Every now is uniquely different [in our position in the universe], i can't believe i haven't realized this before! I mean with the earth traveling as fast as it is, there will never be a person who's been in the same exact place at the same exact time as i have... o.o i suppose that's a pretty obvious assertion but that certainly makes me unique which is comforting.
YES! EXACTLY! That is what I was trying to say...That is one of the MAJOR implications of relativity. They are completely entangled. The only way to quantify space is by the velocity over time. You can just as easily reverse that and have time=velocity over distance and velocity= time over distance. You can not really have any of those concepts stand on their on their own in a meaningful way.
YES! EXACTLY! That is what I was trying to say...That is one of the MAJOR implications of relativity. They are completely entangled. The only way to quantify space is by the velocity over time. You can just as easily reverse that and have time=velocity over distance and velocity= time over distance. You can not really have any of those concepts stand on their on their own in a meaningful way.
This is essentially what i'm trying to figure out in the 'What seperates us from the now' thread. The way i see it is it's all relative to perspective. From a tree's point of view time isn't experienced and from a tree's point of view time does not exist, there is day and there is night but it holds no memories of previous days. So they only live in the now, there would be no building anymore and that moment mean nothing to a tree. We however can collect and process information and store it within neurons and decipher patterns to decide what will happen in the future. The collection of memories from the past are only there as a reference for learning purposes. I can't decide whether or not time happens simultaneously or if one moment is stacked upon another like taking 100 pictures per second and creating a video, i don't think anybody can decide that. Sure we can account for moments separately but in the grand scheme of things does the past really exist? I do not know. I do know that time travel is impossible and i believe it would be possible if in reality each moment were stacked upon one another as if we were progressing through time like passing through different planes (math reference). So no i think each moment is simultaneously connected to one another (no bead necklace, no 100 pictures, just one ever changing piece of play-dough)I mean one moment doesn't follow another like beads on a string, right? There is still a progression of time but that progression does not undermine/devalue the time that has been experienced, does it?
If a building is demolished now, it's not really gone is it? It's still there in another moment, and that other moment can't be taken away.
"Now", not then D:
Well everything you've ever done has lead you to this very moment. This moment will affect/mould the future moments, and join the other moments you've experienced.i think each moment is simultaneously connected to one another (no bead necklace, no 100 pictures, just one ever changing piece of play-dough)
such is philosophy4 pages to described now...
In the course of 100 years there are not 3,024,000,000 moments, there is exactly one moment. In an infinity of years there will only be one moment, one now.
I'm going to preface this by saying I'm going on the assumption the things said by rangrz are true
Is every now/moment permanent? Like in this moment I'm hitting these buttons, but in another moment I'm taking a shit. Do all moments (past, present, future) always exist, and will they always exist?
I mean one moment doesn't follow another like beads on a string, right? There is still a progression of time but that progression does not undermine/devalue the time that has been experienced, does it?
If a building is demolished now, it's not really gone is it? It's still there in another moment, and that other moment can't be taken away.
OT if we could time travel, would altering what happened in an earlier moment (the past) affect peoples recollection of that moment (their past) in this moment (their present)? Because if time is all connected and shit, is it instantaneous? Would the traveler have to wait for a totally different progression of time? If so, would that not create 2 separate 'paths' of time? If there were 2 'paths' of time, would there need to be more of the other dimensions to compensate for this? Would it create an alternative universe?
This idea is problematic and no clear answer exists.OT if we could time travel, would altering what happened in an earlier moment (the past) affect peoples recollection of that moment (their past) in this moment (their present)?
If so, would that not create 2 separate 'paths' of time? If there were 2 'paths' of time
What I've said is as correct as I can make it in such a short amount of text and without bring very complex concepts and a lot of math into it. For the nature of this discussion, its a valid approximation.
Do all these moments exist? Yes, in a way. In the same that if you toss a baseball, each location in space that it passes thru as it moves are real, so any given point in time.
One moment does follow the next like a bead on a string . Just like the previously mentioned baseball progresses thru space, so do things moving thru time. But that does not devalue the previous location or previous time. But what inherent value do they have in the first place?
This idea is problematic and no clear answer exists.
Again, there is no clear or generally agreed upon answer, but many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is probably close to what you are asking I think. It suggests that each time ANYTHING undergoes wavefunction collapse (actually it rejects the reality of a universal wavefunction and works with decoherance instead) another bunch of universes are created, one for each possible result of that event. The theory is an elagent way to unite the randomness of quantum mechanics with the deterministic world of classical mechanics. It's again, far too complex to explain in a short text blurb without the person having all the background and without frighteningly complex mathematics, but I think it might be what you are trying to get at. It is by no means universally accepted among physicists, but it is accepted by a significant number of them. But there subtler issues to it that can not be dealt with without, well, you know, having a lot of background and a lot of math.
You see... numbers do not equal logic.
For instance: time has to exist because physics says so., why is physics right?