Obvious Leo wrote:Atreyu wrote:I find it absurd to view our cognition of time as objective.
This statement is an oxymoron and must not be attributed to me. Cognition is subjective by definition.
The rest of your post is simply a failure to understand physics and the notion of quantised time. I won't bother responding to it because I've covered all these points many times elsewhere. If you don't get it you don't get and there's bugger-all I can do about it, except suggest you get into reading some physics books and come back in ten years time. If you don't get because because you don't want to get it then you've got plenty of mates within these pages and I've got better things to do with my time.
Regards Leo
Higher dimensional theory is not 'physics'. I admit that there is no physics to corroborate higher dimensional theory, but I see this as failure of physics, not the idea. The theory makes sense philosophically and geometrically (in the sense of dimensions of space and their relation with each other). It is quite possible that this theory simply
cannot be corroborated by particle theory or any other known branch of physics.
The idea can be visualized very easily if we take our three dimensional universe and reduce it to a
point. We have now taken 3 dimensions of space and reduced them to zero dimensions, the point. If we now take this point as existing within an ordinary three dimensional room, as if it were a speck of dust floating around in it, those 3 dimensions of space will be 3 dimensions greater than our 3 dimensional universe, which is now represented by the point. So they represent the 4th, 5th, and 6th dimensions of space. They are usually called dimensions of 'space-time', but I like to call them simply 'dimensions of time', since they are responsible for our perception of time/motion/phenomena as our universe (the speck of dust) floats through the 3 'dimensions of time'.
The speck of dust represents our 3 dimensional universe as it exists in
one moment of time. We can say that each point in our 3 dimensional room represents one
possible moment of time, i.e. it could become our present if we happened to cross that particular point. Our awareness is limited to three dimensions of space, so for us our 'reality', the
entire present moment, is all that exists. Our awareness is limited by the boundaries of the speck of dust as it floats through the room. All the other points we call the 'past' (if the speck of dust happened to cross those points) or the 'future' (the points we
anticipate crossing) or
possible pasts or futures (points we say we
could have crossed but did not, or points we say we
could cross but
will not).
Let us say that there are fans in the room and we have a certain knowledge of the wind currents. So we can plot to varying degrees of accuracy both where the speck of dust might have been, or where it might end up, depending on how many variables are known and far away from the current position the speck of dust is. So we could plot various points around the room in which the speck of dust could have been in the last hour, or points that it could cross within the next hour. These points would represent the
possible pasts and futures which we could have experienced but did not, or could experience but will not. The other points which the speck of dust could not have crossed represent
impossible pasts and futures. Things which simply never could have been nor ever could be, which we know based on the
certainty of our knowledge of the variables involved, i.e. how confident we are that we know of all the fans in the room and their outputs. So in this analogy our three dimensional room contains our present three dimensional universe as we are experiencing right now, all of our past, all of our future, all the possible pasts that could have been but were not, all the possible futures that could be but will not be, and impossible pasts and futures that never could have been or be because we are confident enough that we know the universe well enough to say so.
Now, the idea here of course is that this three dimensional room with the speck of dust actually represents the real Universe. It might not, but this model explains our cognition of time, shows how it is really space, shows its spatial relationship to our three dimensional world, and represents causation without resorting to either free will or determinism, but rather both depending on how much is known about the 'path' our universe will take as it 'travels through time'. The past is not 'gone', this is a logical absurdity, it is merely the points in higher space which we have crossed but are not currently aware of due to the limitations of our psychic apparatus, namely, its inability to perceive/cognize more than three dimensions of space. And the same with the future. It is merely the points of higher space which we have not crossed yet, but will. And nothing is 'set in stone', because points of higher space outside of any past or future path of our universe as it 'travels through time' also exist, they simply haven't been nor will be crossed.
You can write it off because physics cannot grab hold of it, but not everything is within its boundaries, nor may they be looking in the right direction. But this model resolves and explains many of the dilemmas in regard to our subjective perception/cognition of space and time.