dave_a_mbs
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central california
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I tend to agree in principle that the issue is balance of a sort, but I am a bit skeptical whether it is in this specific world that we'll find it.
Most of the above thread has looked at two different aspects of time. One aspect is experiential, which is ultimately valid to the subjective, so long as we attach to this universe, and so long as we attach only to our present role as inhabitants, rather than creators.
The other aspect is time-in-itself, which is a construct, and has no ultimate existence in an absolute sense. This latter aspect bleeds off into our own experience through Special Relativity, which suggests a role as we begin to get creative - although I believe that this is just an artifact, personally. The idea is that as something moves faster and faster, it experiences a reduced rate of passage of time, until at the speed of light the moving object experiences no time at all, while the other parts of the world seem to be involved in passing time at an infinite rate. This, however, reduces to the idea of a universe with specific properties.
We often view time as a "dimension". In this sense, a "dimension" is usually thought of as one of the collection of vectors that locate something in a continuum. Further, all the "basic dimensions" (literally the basis vectors) lie at right angles to one another, by which we mean that what we do to dimension X has nothing to do with what happens to dimensions Y or Z. The two are incommensurable, can't be brought together as correlates.
We view dimensions as spatial because of our fixation on visual effects. However, my evening at a restaurant recently brought forth two enchiladas and a chile relleno who had dimensions of peppery to taste, high temperature, and an appetizing tomato sauce color - all three being dimensions that are incommensurable. We could add the background music as another dimension. Thus, not all dimensions are spatial, even when we use spatial terms to describe things.
Time is certainly incommensurable with all spatial measures, and just about everything else. In that regard it appears dimensional. However, it appears as a direction, and not as a continuum in which we measure the space by walking back and forth along the stretch of a century or two with a tape measure.
If we look at the causes of time, things look different. Logic demands that aggregates be composed of substituent parts, and these of further substituents, all the way back to the Beginning. As Bishop Berkeley argued, were this not true, then the stuff arriving ex nihilo would occur outside our continuum of experiences because it would share nothing with us. In this sense, time is the "distance" between formation of the predecessor terms, and the formation of subsequent aggregations. Thus, time has an absolute ordinal nature. It is an expression of causal seriality.
The reason that I view our experiences of time as artificial, as locally composed opinions, is that motion through our universe alters the appearance of the passage of time according to a ticking clock. As I drive to work, I am experiencing time at a slightly slower rate than the guy standing on the corner. But the airplane flying overhead experiences it at still another rate.
Sitting at the center of the face of the Cosmic Clock, I am one with the wavefront of the Cosmos that expands at lightspeed, and I have no time. Then, as I move a toe to alter my posture I interact, and a temporal event occurs. Again sitting still, my time ceases, and the world around me ages at an infinite rate, stopping abruptly when I rise and go off to the biffy for urgent business. While I only have one or two events out of all this, the people in the world around me have myriads of lifetimes. Time is not a very good way to express our relationship. And there is a decent argument to be made that only while we live inside this world will we experience it temporally as we do.
From the "God point", the world is cast forth as a succession of aggregates, each giving rise to the next, so that we have ordinality. But there is no need for time in the usual sense of everyday experience. The causal connection between instants of creation is defined as a sequence. That sequence is defined within a single instant, just as a line can be drawn between two points in a sequential manner, yet is defined as a line in a single instant, regardless of the manner in which it is realized. I have found this to be frustrating in the extreme, as I tried to measure the rate at which God build our world, but in the end, it all seems to resolve into a matter of viewpoint.
Interestingly, it seems that we might totally do away with the notion of both time and space and replace them by expressions of probability. These capture both the sequential nature of dependent origination of events, and the somewhat arbitrary experiences we have as we move our viewpoint through the world. It also gets rid of the idea that there is a fixed, well-defined, collocation of lumpy stuff with equally rigid relationships. Instead, we get Alysia's world, infinite freedom within which we have attached to this or that, but not in any totally absolute sense. (It also leads to some really fascinating equations!)
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