...one-way means "not the reverse way".
That is sooooo profound on sooooo many levels, man.
...one-way means "not the reverse way".
Phlog...,
That would be impossible. Any event, i.e. the change of one state to another will always require the passage of time. Hence for the BB to occur time must have existed to allow the change of state from no BB to the BB. It is therefore not possible that time started with the BB.
Furthermore, when considering what might have occurred before the BB we will always reach a point that time must have been present. If there was a point when time did not exist then we could not exist now since nothing could have occured without time to start the sequence that led to us. It follows then that time had no beginning.
I tend to disagree
No that is still not correct. For an event to occur a change of state must occur – time must pass. It is not just the duration between events since an event needs time to pass.That might seem logical to you, but it's just not the case. What is time if not the separation between two events.
It is impossible. If there was no time then an initial event could not occur and the universe could never have begun. Since the universe does exist then time must have always existed. You might argue that time was created first but that is again an event that would need time to exist.Before the Universe existed, before energy, before matter, there were no events. Therefore, there was no time.
The fault is your for assuming that the BB is the beginning of everything. Throw that model away and there is no problem. And you also have a problem comprehending infinity (eternity). Infinity isn’t a numerical quantity but a state that has no boundary.It wasn't just ticking away waiting for something to happen, space-time was born at the moment of the big bang. If you think time existed before the BB, how long was there before the BB, after time came into existance? If argue that time always existed, then time waited for ever, before the BB, .. er, in which case, how can something have started after an eternity? I think you need to apply some more logic!
When they try to figure out why a cargo cult is not a cargo religion, worshipping the god "cargo" ?superlum said:What's a good analogy for how close a theist can come to understanding the celestial teapot.
Help me out here...
You can make a pretty good argument that time, as we know it, did not necessarily exist before the beginning of the universe.Cris said:It is impossible. If there was no time then an initial event could not occur and the universe could never have begun.
remember the OP is that time for an atheist is the closest they can come to understanding godThen compare time and God please, attribute for attribute.
Keeping in mind that this is metaphysical time based on 19th century metaphysics, and LG's God based on 19th century Christian theology.LG said:remember the OP is that time for an atheist is the closest they can come to understanding god
in many ways, time still remains metaphysical, since all attempts to empirically reduce it do not enable us to control it in any meaningful wayKeeping in mind that this is metaphysical time based on 19th century metaphysics
that's news to me, and LG's God based on 19th century Christian theology.
erm - I doubt it.Simply recalling the understanding of God one had as a youth will also work, if one was raised in a sufficiently sophisticated Christian religious household. That's probably LG's God, very closely.
I think I can see where you are not coming fromIf you try to use 20th century physicist's time, and compare an atheist's incomprehension of the Balinese Monkey God, you won't understand LG's point.
erm okMeanwhile, further contemplation has solidified an initial whim, and I put it as a claim: the closest a theist can come to understanding atheism is by imagining themselves living among believers in a Cargo Cult, and trying to clarify what's wrong with Cargo as a deity.
depends on how you want to work with the word "mystical" - I mean the way that time invokes irrevocable change in all things is certainly astounding.Lg,
Time is simply an axiomatic property of existence just as the 3 spatial dimensions are essential for existence. If any of the four are absent then existence cannot occur. I do not see a basis for anything mystical about any of these attributes.
Saying "an event needs time" is thinking of it the wrong way.Cris said:Any event, i.e. the change of one state to another will always require the passage of time.
Nope, that's all pretty clear. Math can "do away with" time, too.Cris said:Time is simply an axiomatic property of existence just as the 3 spatial dimensions are essential for existence. If any of the four are absent then existence cannot occur. I do not see a basis for anything mystical about any of these attributes.
Note: I hesistate to use the term dimension here since such a concept is really a mathematical abstraction but I hope the perspective is clear.
That is sooooo [around] on sooooo many levels, man.
Phlog,
No that is still not correct. For an event to occur a change of state must occur – time must pass. It is not just the duration between events since an event needs time to pass.
It is impossible. If there was no time then an initial event could not occur and the universe could never have begun.
The fault is your for assuming that the BB is the beginning of everything. Throw that model away and there is no problem. And you also have a problem comprehending infinity (eternity). Infinity isn’t a numerical quantity but a state that has no boundary.
I thought there was still debate out there about whether something did come before. I recently read an essay where some physicist were discussing the possibility of universes undergoing natural selection. Other essays and articles gave me the impression that the issue has not been laid to rest. If it has then physicists out there should be clearly that the door is closed.The event was space, time, and matter being created. It was possible, because that's exactly what happened.
* the pre-big bang model; the ekpyrotic model, in which the Big Bang is the result of a collision between branes; and the cyclic model, a variant of the ekpyrotic model in which collisions occur periodically.
* chaotic inflation, in which inflation events start here and there in a random quantum-gravity foam, each leading to a bubble universe expanding from its own big bang.
Proposals in the last two categories see the Big Bang as an event in a much larger and older universe, or multiverse, and not the literal beginning.
No, you are assuming there had to be a beginning and there is no basis for that. Even the state change from nothing to something would require passage of time. A beginning becomes impossible since any action would require time to be present first.Clearly not, something can come from nothing, or we wouldn't be here.
And that event would have required time to begin.The event was space, time, and matter being created.
That’s an unsupportable assertion.It was possible, because that's exactly what happened.
That’s because you are still thinking of infinity as a numerical quantity and have tied yourself in knots. But I’m not suggesting that time can exist independently, that has been my point here, time is a property of existence, and since for anything to happen time must be present then there can never have been a point where time did not exist and hence never a point where the universe did not exist.IF time always existed, and Inifinity passed before any event that occurred, such as the start on the Universe, how can something ever come to pass, if you have to wait for eternity, eh? Riddle me that. Eternity isn't over, but here we are.
Why?For things to happen, you need boundaries, limits, and beginnings.
Huh! Nonsence. Time no more moves in a direction any more than “length” moves in a direction. Think of time (and hence existence) as a line that has infinite length and “now” is simply an arbitrary point on that line. No beginning or end is needed or possible.Time only moves forwards, for your postulations to be correct, you need negative time,....
I don’t think that helps since time and events occur independently of us. But perhaps this does highlight my point that time is not an independent commodity but a property of existence much like length and width. In this sense any given event necessarily includes time.Saying "an event needs time" is thinking of it the wrong way.
We need time, not events. Events don't know or care, about time. We do.
Not sure how this specific example helps the debate.p.s. Time is the direction, or dimension of entropy, or dispersal, or dissipation.
Things don't indissipate, or undisperse, or unentropicise, or whatever.
I think what I had in mind was that there is no necessity to add further explanation for “what is”. I suspect you may view this as reductionism but it seems to me there is a set of basic physical laws and conditions that make our universe possible, i.e. these are what constitute existence. Now the question of whether a deity exists that designed all that seems superfluous.depends on how you want to work with the word "mystical"
I think I like Einstein’s pantheistic spiritual view on this – he was in wonderment and awe of a universe that reveals itself to us through the laws of physics.I mean the way that time invokes irrevocable change in all things is certainly astounding.
I would tend to agree and I have been struggling this week to further capture those elusive qualities. I’m sure I will continue to think on this.And furthermore if you back to the OP you can see how time has a bit more to offer than the 3 spatial dimensions
Those aren't serious issues, they're simpleminded circularities of logic.LG said:There are serious issues that surround time - namely the inevitability of it and it's existence in all things)