- #36
lmoh
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GeorgeDishman said:Your distinction is rather subtle, I see our awareness of the passage of time as emergent, an interpretation of the accumulation of seemingly ordered memories. However, that gets us into the complexities of neuroscience and I'm far from up on that topic!
I just want to hammer in your last point here. Memories are necessary for a perceived change, are not necessarily required for changes in perception. I can be an animal with virtually no memory of my life, yet I can still experience t1, then t2, then t3, even if at t2, I have no perception that time has passed from t1 to t2 (because I barely have an ordered memory of it).You can say that neuroscience can deal with the former well, but as for the latter, it is a bit more complicated. In fact, if we are going to have a block universe scenario, then as I said before, the emergence of this kind of "passage of mind" may be entirely unrelated to the issue of matter. But with that said, it is possible to view our changing experiences as the byproduct of having brain states in different parts of the block universe, especially if you take in entropy as a description for why our experience moves from t1 to t2.