Spacetime because they wouldn't happen without time. But space because that's where it takes place. Where it actually happens is space, and it affects time. |
Not true, space would exist in that moment where it stopped. I'm not saying time has disappeared, I'm saying time has stopped progressing. The moment would be captured perfectly, an unchanging image of the universe. Argument still stands. Time can stop and space will continue to be there, but without space - time would have no place to exist. |
The issue is that it IS obvious. Very obvious, but it can't be proven without a doubt. The point is that any logical thought would lead to this conclusion and what evidence there is would also point to it. However, there's always the chance that it's wrong, and that's what you're arguing even though there's no reason to. The whole world could simply be a projection of our minds and not actually existent, but it's healthier to think the world is actually real - and a lot more probable. |
Am I mentally retarded? "We don't and we can't know." Did NASA fake the moon landing? "We don't and we can't know." Was Trump elected? "We don't and we can't know." -- By using the argument that we can't possibly know anything, suddenly you have answers to nothing. |
If we IGNORE all this to simply say "we don't and we can't know," simply because we can't prove it beyond impossible to disprove doubt, then I don't know what to say. |
It's much like "last thursdayism." Sure, we can't disprove it, but things like ockham's razor and such serve to disprove these undisprovable/unprovable theories. |
I feel like you hate me a bit more with each reply! |
Sorry, but no. This interpretation is just incorrect. The universe and its contents are four-dimensional objects. They exist in spacetime, not solely in space or time. |
The issue with this is that for this analogy to be applicable, there needs to be another time dimension at least partly independent of our own universe's time. |
I'm sorry, but what? The quote you're responding to relates to the question in semiotics of whether there exist some things that cannot be named. What does that have to do with sollipsism? |
However, the question of sollipsism is different. You're trapped inside your own brain, and the only contact to the outside world is your senses. You have no means to obtain independent evidence that the world is indeed as your senses tell you. |
You're confusing Occam's Razor ("given two explanations for the same phenomenon with equal predictive power, prefer the one that makes fewer assumptions") with Popper's answer to the demarcation problem ("an unfalsifiable claim is outside the scope of science"). |
Nah, I love a good debate. |
I think it would be safe to assume that space would still exist if time were to stop. |
After all, moving at the speed of light means time is almost at a standstill, and it doesn't seem to eliminate space. |
nothing in physics says that they have to appear the way they do to us |
There's no way to describe a color so thoroughly that you can actually have that color appear in another's mind. |
I don't think so. We're not talking about relativistic time dilation. If you were to travel at c, your time would pause for a finite amount of stationary time. |
On the contrary. Consciousness is an entirely physical process. Your color perception is direct consequence of physics and the physical layout of your brain. |
This is just because our knowledge of the brain is incomplete. |
By the way, this might interest you: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternalism_(philosophy_of_time) |
games that mess around with different ideas of time |
What reason would there be for space to not exist if time stopped or ceased to be? |
Yes there is only the physical aspects of our brains which process this. [...] However, there's no physical aspect in the universe saying that these light frequencies have to be the color label our brain gives it. |
Yes. I don't remember what argument led us down this one but all I was saying is that language as it is now is too limited to go as far as to describe a color in a way to make it appear in one's mind. I'm sure there is some way that it's possible, but not through language as it is now. Language wouldn't be able to provide the brain enough knowledge for it to be able to actually envision a color never seen before. |
Whether it's possible for there to be real things that cannot be (not are are not) named is a debate in semiotics. |
don't know about and haven't even imagined yet. |
Let's go back to my canvas analogy. |
You're contradicting yourself. The reason you perceive red the way you perceive it rather than any other way is because of the way your brain is wired up. This is a physical phenomenon. If you disagree then please explain what you mean by "physical aspect in the universe". |
I made this clarification in my initial statement. |
The question in semiotics is whether there are things that cannot be named (or, equivalently, communicated). It's about the power of language. |
Height and width only exist within the canvas (when speaking relative to the canvas) just as how time exists within space |
So since they are aspects of the canvas, they don't cease to be when we're not on the canvas. |
Supposedly, when you say that when you're no longer on the canvas so there's no height, its the same as if you're no longer in time so there's no space? If so, I don't find that to make much sense. |
However, even when time is affected in this way and such, the fabric of space doesn't seem to be affected by time. |
But that's your brain doing that, there's no law of the universe governing whether you should see certain light waves as certain colors or not. |
In the analogy, the canvas is the universe (or spacetime), width is time, and height is space. |
I've gone over this already. Gravity and motion are phenomena in spacetime. |
But the brain is doing what physics says it must do. |
If you somehow found away to escape the oxygen, then by default you've also escaped all the air |
Instead of seeing the tesseract's 4th dimension as something you can "cross", consider if it disappeared all together. The other dimensions don't vanish! If I take away a dimension from 4th dimensional object, it collapses into a 3d one. |
As we agree, without space there's no time as we know it, but take away time and there's no real reason to think that space would also disappear. Since like I said, take away that dimension of time and all you have is a physical object in space that is static in time. |
whereas is we have an object that doesn't exist in space, we know it doesn't move through time |
Gravity is caused by mass which exists within space and moves through time. |
Also, if space was as dependent on time as time was on space, would that mean the universe would disappear without time? |
However, space itself doesn't have any limitation like that, it's empty space after all, it doesn't need to move through time to exist. |
I think you're confusing colors as being physics. Colors have nothing to do with physics |
If you watch the video I linked, it's explained pretty well. Color is an illusion and doesn't exist outside of our minds. |
What? But you just said, you can remove the oxygen without removing the air. |
Yeah, but that's not what it means for time to end. If you take spacetime and remove time, the universe as we know it ceases to be, and to have ever been, completely and utterly. When I say that time ends I'm talking about reaching the end of file. You're talking about deleting the file. |
You say "take a tesseract, remove time, and you get a cube with width, height, and depth: space". Okay, let's continue this idea. Let's also remove depth and width, and we end up with a vertical segment. But you said it doesn't which dimensions we remove, so let's do something else now: let's take the tesseract and remove only width. We end up with a 2D universe plus a time dimension. |
Not true. Particles can be annihilated. Something that doesn't exist in space now might have existed in space previously. If something exists for any non-zero length of time then it does move through time, even if it doesn't currently exist in space. |
Yes. The word "universe" refers to spacetime: three spatial dimensions and a time dimension. |
Space doesn't move through time nor does time move through space. |
The subjective experience of color is caused by electrochemical signals inside a living brain. How is that having nothing to do with physics? |
Look dude, I'm not stupid. I'm perfectly acquainted with the idea of qualia, and I'm saying it's bullshit. |
zapshe wrote: |
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Suppose you have a room full of Earth air and you remove the oxygen. There's still air in that room, it wasn't dependent on the oxygen. The air is still made up of other things. However, take away the air and you've gotten rid of oxygen. |
The atmosphere of Earth is the layer of gases, commonly known as air, ... By volume, dry air contains 78.09% nitrogen, 20.95% oxygen, 0.93% argon, 0.04% carbon dioxide, and small amounts of other gases. |
Without them, you cannot exist in this universe as an object with mass, so you can't have 2d plus time. |
So before you can have the time dimension, you need the preceding ones relating to space, since you simply cannot exist as a physical object in this universe without those dimensions. |
So what I meant by what I said was that when it no longer exists in space it no longer exists in time after that moment. |
there's no law of physics saying that all brains have to convert certain light frequencies to certain colors. |
"Air" on top of Mount Everest or in a submarine, whose carbon dioxide removal system has failed, has different mixture to the point that it is not suitable for breathing. The question is, can you refer to unbreathable mixture of gases with common name "air" or not? |
Elementary particles, such as electrons and photons, as far as we can tell have no dimensions. |
But that aside, the reasoning "a 2D universe would be empty, there a 2D universe could not exist" is invalid. |
NO. It's no longer present in space, but if it ever existed then it exists in the time line. You can't use phrases like "no longer" when talking about the time line. |
"Air" on top of Mount Everest or in a submarine, whose carbon dioxide removal system has failed, has different mixture to the point that it is not suitable for breathing. The question is, can you refer to unbreathable mixture of gases with common name "air" or not? |
But the dimensions of the universe reflects the dimensions found for the objects within it. |
Anytime mass exists in space it exists in time. Once it's not in space, it's no longer in time |
But the universe is expanding without the objects within it (mainly galaxies) getting larger and without more matter being added in. |
Why do you have two phrases that mean exactly the same thing? |