Oh damn Sage, just when I was going to call you a stubborn old goat and say I was done playing irresistable force to your immovable object! |
|
^^ Thank you for that clarification, Darkmatters; that makes much more sense, and dovetails nicely with what I've been taught, and, well, common sense. My wife would be proud of you, as you've paraphrased her oft-voiced (sometimes screamed) argument well. And, before I resign my current attempt to sell the blasphemous idea that time doesn't exist, let me add this thought to your last post: |
|
Last edited by Sageous; 01-13-2013 at 09:37 PM.
Oh damn Sage, just when I was going to call you a stubborn old goat and say I was done playing irresistable force to your immovable object! |
|
Nope, acceleration is just as real as time, for the same reasons; indeed, isn't it just a corollary of the Arrow of Time anyway? |
|
Ok, I gots something - are width, height and depth real? They're not material or energy. And while we did have to invent the symbolic language of drawing to represent these qualities so we can work with them, the qualities themselves actually do exist as inherent properties of the objects. |
|
Last edited by Darkmatters; 01-13-2013 at 11:07 PM.
Uh oh, you're starting to channel Hume... |
|
Who - me? |
|
Last edited by Darkmatters; 01-14-2013 at 01:33 AM.
Now I never said time was a force. I said watching something change over time is somewhat like seeing something be affected by an invisible force. |
|
April Ryan is my friend,
Every sorrow she can mend.
When i visit her dark realm,
Does it simply overwhelm.
I'm getting tired of this, but you deserve a couple of responses, Khh: |
|
No foul at all, I think, as the measurement of width does indeed represent an aspect of an actual, existing object. As I said, width is not an object unto itself, but what it represents, or measures, is part of an existing, touchable, part of reality object. Not so with time. |
|
I would agree that our way of thinking of space, say an xyz coordinate system or whatever, isn't real but just a concept. However the fact that there is distance between objects, and that objects themselves have volume indicates that space is a real phenomenon. Otherwise they couldn't have volume. Or shape. |
|
April Ryan is my friend,
Every sorrow she can mend.
When i visit her dark realm,
Does it simply overwhelm.
I think that it is often overlooked, and even scoffed at, the possibility of a holographic universe scenario in which time, space, dimension, direction, and/or movement is completely different from our perceptions of it. On a computer screen we see (2D representations of) 3D objects. These objects do, in a sense, exist, as impulses of electricity. We have no absolute standard for how we should view the universe and our place in it. For all we know we could, ourselves, be energy pulses. We could be 2 dimensional. We could be 1 dimensional. We could be 4 dimensional. We could actually exist in many different ways that is perceived, by us, as a 3D space. |
|
---o--- my DCs say I'm dreamy.
Again, you need to define your terms. |
|
So I read -- okay, skimmed, for lack of time (there it goes existing again!) -- the articles you linked to, and I must say the author seems to be upholding what I've been trying to say... Only his words make much more sense than mine, I'm afraid. Thanks for sharing -- I think it means a lot. |
|
You haven't skimmed deep enough - he cites articles and books with deep scientific arguments for the nonexistence of time, and even of space - but he brings them up only to argue against them. I recommend (when that non-existent time allows) reading lots of the links too - some great stuff. |
|
Oh man, and now it gets complicated hahaha!! I know very little about this theory, but I understand scientists theorize that if an object were to enter a black hole, as it becomes crushed down it would also somehow smear itself as a layer of information around the perimeter of the black hole (not sure how they could even surmise this) and from that info a duplicate of the object could be created. And from this they then postulated the holographic universe theory. Or at least that's something like what I heard on some science show, I might have it all screwed up. |
|
If you haven't read it already, you might try The Hidden reality, by Brian Greene. Though you described the holographic universe very well, he does an excellent job describing it and other cool astrophysical stuff. He did the same for time & space in The Fabric of the Cosmos, And, if you're mathematically challenged like me, These books are most helpful. |
|
I believe I know what you are saying, and I agree. What makes the 3D interpretation of reality that we see less "real" than a hologram or projection? Nothing. Who defines "real" besides us, as humans. I mean only to point out that these possibilities D |
|
---o--- my DCs say I'm dreamy.
Because time becomes nonsensical, as I understand it, though I welcome criticism. |
|
Last edited by sloth; 01-16-2013 at 01:29 AM.
---o--- my DCs say I'm dreamy.
Sure we could live in a hologram, or we could live in a sufficiently advanced computer simulation. But why would your assume that? And, perhaps more importantly, what difference would it make? |
|
April Ryan is my friend,
Every sorrow she can mend.
When i visit her dark realm,
Does it simply overwhelm.
At this point I can't wrap my head around the concept enough to understand how time or anything else would be affected really. If I think of a computer showing a quicktime movie from info stored on its hard drive then that brings up the idea of pausing and chapter advancing - but since this would be a natural process I doubt it would include such options. As for what kind of mechanism might 'project' everything, the only thing drifting into my head right now is light passing through a prism or a water drop and projecting a spectrum. But I know that's a meaningless thought - I'm a complete noob with no understanding of the theory. After reading about it more thoroughly I might be able to comprehend it a bit better. |
|
I did not state that anyone should assume such a thing, or that I do. |
|
Last edited by sloth; 01-16-2013 at 07:14 PM.
---o--- my DCs say I'm dreamy.
At the most basic level, the theory does not actually suggest that the universe is made of light, or anything that specific. I admit that I am no expert. I only studied a bit on it, to see if anyone else had considered the same idea that I did. |
|
Last edited by sloth; 01-16-2013 at 08:52 PM.
---o--- my DCs say I'm dreamy.
Ok, I understand the scenario - it's not that bad really. But what you're explaining isn't the part that confuses me - what I'm wondering about are the actual physical aspects of it: how information can be stored smeared out across the surface of the universe - information in what form? And what type of mechanism would decode that information? I'm also confused about how scientists could have determined any of this. Was it all done mathematically, or based on some type of observations? (Scratch that last one - of course it can't be based on observations of the inside of a black hole or the periphery of the universe - we haven't been able to observe these things and probably never will) |
|
Last edited by Darkmatters; 01-18-2013 at 02:34 AM.
^^ Well post-scripted, and I agree! Now I have one: |
|
Last edited by Sageous; 01-18-2013 at 02:53 AM.
Bookmarks