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echo: philos
to: KEITH KNAPP
from: MARK BLOSS
date: 1998-03-02 11:36:00
subject: Time and Again 1/2

>
>Keith Knapp wrote to Mark Bloss about Time and Again        1/2
 
 MB> KK> Einstein once said, concerning relativity, that time is what clocks
 MB> KK> measure and nothing more.  I have no idea what he meant by that.
 
 MB> What he meant by that: time is illusory - it is "man-made".  It is not
 MB> something that exists separate from us - but is dependent upon us to
 MB> measure it.  If we were not here to observe time passing - it would not
 MB> pass.  I do not entirely agree with this: yet the same principle states
 MB> that a tree falling in a wood with no one to hear it still makes sound
 MB> waves - but since there is no perception of sound - there is no sound.
 MB> And there is no way to _prove_ that the sound waves occur either!  It
 MB> takes an observation to make the proof "happen".
 KK> I think we may be confusing "time as a property of matter" with
 KK> "time as a way the brain orders its sensory input."
 
 There is no substantial difference.
 KK> There is considerable evidence that matter was doing its stuff
 KK> long before there were human brains (or any brains) to observe it.
 
 Certainly - but it takes a human brain to speculate as to what it was
 doing, nevertheless, even before there were human brains to speculate.
 [snip]
 MB> I cannot justify a substantiate difference between "endless time",
 MB> and "no time".  They are equivalent in every respect which has meaning.
 KK> Within your personal frame of reference.
 KK> The real question is how well your personal frame of reference
 KK> accurately models what physical matter does.
 
 Certainly, and what physical matter does... is entirely dependent upon
 how it is observed doing it.  If I existed as a frog, I might have a 
 different view entirely about what matter does.  And whether or not
 matter does it the way it does because of an objectivation, or whether
 it does it because I observe that it does it.
 [snip]
 KK> My understanding is that time is a property of matter, so once matter
 KK> as we know it became stable, a mile was always a mile and an hour was
 KK> always an hour.  Prior to the time when matter as we know it became
 KK> stable, we either do not know or cannot ever know.
 
 But, WE are also a property of matter.  You can't ask the wind what
 temperature it is, because they are both properties of the atmosphere.
 
 
 MB> Be that as it may - we could use an atomic clock to measure time,
 MB> certainly and precisely; and we do.  But even this exact measurement
 MB> is entangled in the very substance of what we call "reality".  And
 MB> as Lewis Mumford said: that today's "astrophysicists... must reckon
 MB> with... the possibility that their outer world is only our inner world
 MB> turned inside out."  What I mean by that, is your perceptions of the
 MB> passage of time might be just as meaningful - perhaps more so - than
 MB> the precise courses of protons within the nucleus of an atom.
 KK> Only if you make the category error of confusing time as a property
 KK> of matter with the brain's subjective measurements of time.
 As I mentioned - we are also a property of matter.  And we are flawed
 in the sense that we do not see our progenitor clearly enough to know
 what "time" it really is - even if we are using an atomic clock to do
 it.  Relative to a moment before, we can be exact, but moment by moment
 might stretch to eons without our perceptions, even matter itself may
 be changing its behavior from moment to moment - we cannot tell it.  It
 is not a confusion with the brain's subjective sense of time's movement-
 it's that _matter's_ objectivity itself is drawn into question.  Atoms
 have a nucleus with one or more protons revolving around it, all at a
 determined frequency.  We can do amazing and wonderful things with this
 information - but we must not forget that it is only in the world of
 appearances that it is happening.  What means do we have to determine
 whether or not these apparent regular patterns to matter really are
 regular?  Because we are also a product of this same universe, it 
 becomes impossible for us to tell whether we are looking at regularity,
 or that we are only seeing an _apparent_ regularity.  Our objectivity
 is, and always shall be, limited by the universe in which we exist.
 
... The sooner you fall behind, the more time you have to catch up.
--- GEcho 1.11++TAG 2.7c
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