- #36
Lynch101
Gold Member
- 768
- 85
PeterDonis said:That doesn't help because it doesn't tell me how to test whether it applies equally to past, present, and future events. Basically this looks to me like a way of dodging a question one doesn't have a good answer to.
PeterDonis said:You keep talking as if this is a viable alternative. It's not. As I've already explained, at a minimum, the events in the past light cone of your present event are fixed and certain, which would seem to mean they, at least, must "exist".
I've grouped these comments together because I think they all speak to the same point. I acknowledge that I keep changing terminology. That is an attempt to find a more suitable way of describing what the Block Universe says. That is what I am trying to do first, simply establish what the BU says.PeterDonis said:I also note that you keep switching terminology. First it was "real", now it's "exist", and in another post you used "form part of the structure of the Universe". None of those are really scientific terms; I've already explained why "real" isn't, and the explanation for "exist" or "form part of the structure of the Universe" would be similar. I suggested "fixed and certain" as a better alternative; see further comments below.
===============================================
I'm returning to the top of this reply just to mention that I have been replying to your proposal of the term "fixed and certain" below. It certainly a preferable term to that of "real" but I think it needs some further clarification before it can be used in this context. Perhaps, more accurately, I need further clarification before I will be able to start using it in this context.
===============================================
What does the
You are obviously well familiar with the Block Universe, given your writings on it; and hopefully I'm not confusing you with another poster, but I think you've said that the Block Universe is a possible interpretation of relativity. But , you argue that it is not an absolute necessity, as often tends to be presented. Am I correct in that?
To start, we're just trying to establish what the familiar picture of the Block Universe says - aside from the claim that it is a necessary conclusion. Prior to that, we just need to be on the same page about what the BU says about past and future events. You might be able to state that more rigorously than I can but the BU definitely says something about past, present, and future events. It says something about past and future events that makes it different to a universe that is based only on a global "now".
Can we say past and future events have the same status?/ontology?/constitution?/[insert the most precise possible term here] as present events.
Ontology
Instead can we talk about the ontology of events that constitute a world line. The BU says that all points on a world line are ontologically equal. No single event is preferred over another. The observations we make in our scientific experiments might correspond to single events on our world line but that doesn't single it out as special.
To give a real world example, again, of our 10/30/50th birthdays. If now is our 30th birthday then we consider our 10th birthday to be in the past and our 50th birthday to be in the future. A universe with a global present comprises only the event of our 30th birthday, only a single event on our world line. The Block Universe, however comprises all of those events 10/30/50th birthdays. None of the events is singled out over the others.Dodging the question
I don't want to get bogged down on this particular point because I know how endless these philosophical rabbit holes can be, so I am keen to avoid such a debate. I think it's more important to just get on the same page as to what the BU says about past, present, and future events. I don't want to dodge the point above, however.
The way it is used here, the term "real" isn't a set of criteria which something must fulfil, it is instead simply a label that we can try to apply in our discussion. If we apply the label "real" to present events, say our 30th birthday, then the Block Universe says that label applies equally to past events, our 10th birthday, as well as future events, such as our 50th birthday. We don't need to know the true nature of reality to use the term in this way, instead, if we say that our 30th birthday is real, then we must say the same thing about our 10th and 50th birthdays.
We could use a different label, but "real" has the benefits of our preconceptions of what it means. It is a double edged sword however, for the reason you raise above, but any other term would probably cause more confusion.
Thank you Peter, yes. My apologies, when I refer to the Newtonian picture I am referring to the conception of it that is best juxtaposed with the Block Universe to offer a contrast. From here on, if I say the Newtonian picture, I am referring to the conception that is based on a global "now" not on a Newtonian Block Universe.PeterDonis said:No, it doesn't. Newtonian physics is perfectly consistent with viewing the past as fixed and certain. It is also consistent, as has already been pointed out, with a "block universe" view in which the future is fixed and certain as well as the present and past (this works because Newtonian physics is deterministic). So it seems like you were given an incorrect view of Newtonian physics as well as relativity.
As you have mentioned above, the term "fixed and certain" can be applied equally to a Newtonian universe, either with a single global "now" or a Newtonian block universe, to a relativistic block universe, or in another way that isn't equivalent to the BU.PeterDonis said:That what happens at them is fixed and will not change. Or, to put it another way, if we consider all possible 4-d spacetime models that could be realized, given what you know at your present event, all of them will have the same set of events (things that happen) in the past light cone of your present event. But not all of them will have the same set of events (things that happen) outside of the past light cone of your present event.
These represent very different pictures of the Universe, so the idea of "fixed and certain" would need some additional clarification. You mentioned above that the BU considers future events to be "fixed and certain", so, according to your application, we only consider events in the past light cone to be fixed and certain, it sounds very much like the conceptualisation usually referred to as "the growing block universe".
You say
As you have said, your proposal is consistent with all the different views, but all of the different views present very different pictures of the Universe, so I think it is necessary to clarify what we are referring to when we use it.PeterDonis said:My proposal is consistent with this view, as far as I can see, but my proposal has the advantage, from a scientific point of view, of not making claims that are not scientific.
Is it intended to be more of a catch all phrase?
You say
Absolutely agree on this point. We cannot define what happens outside our past light cone.PeterDonis said:As I've pointed out, block universe proponents ignore this obvious fact because they look at models that they have constructed, in which they declare by fiat what events happen everywhere in the 4-d spacetime of their model. But the real world doesn't work like that. You can't dictate by fiat what happens outside your past light cone. You can try to predict what will happen outside your past light cone, but those predictions can never be perfect, because you don't have sufficient data in your past light cone to determine for certain what will happen at any event outside your past light cone.
Note that this is true even if the fundamental physical laws are deterministic; even in a deterministic system, in order to have sufficient data to fix all events everywhere in the spacetime, you need to have initial data on an entire spacelike 3-surface. But no past light cone contains such data, and nobody ever has or ever will have such data. I discuss this in my Insights article (and IIRC there was more discussion of it in the comment thread on it).
I don't think this affects our conclusion though. We can talk strictly about the events that constitute our own world line and reason from there.
You mentioned
If I could go back and choose again (and if free will really exists) I would choose to study physics. Unfortunately, my past is fixed and certain so that isn't an option.PeterDonis said:The fix for this is simple: don't try to learn actual science from pop science sources. Brian Greene in particular is a frequent offender--if I had a dollar for every PF thread where we've had to correct someone's misconceptions based on one of his pop science books or shows or videos, I'd be retired now.
I am grateful for pop-science though because it has allowed me to at least engage with physics, where otherwise I would not have. My understanding of physics is certainly better because of pop-science material, because without it, it would be non-existent. Even if it means the arduous task of unlearning some things, but I feel like it's at least given me a foundation from which to start.You say
I'm not sure what you mean by smuggling in "past and future" events (with emphasis on and). Are you implying that relativity necessitates a block universe which comprises past and present events, but not necessarily future events?PeterDonis said:This argument is simply wrong. It's not even as good as the argument I refuted in my Insights article, which at least made some pretense of using concepts specifically from relativity. This argument could just as well be made for Newtonian physics, and is just as wrong when applied to that. The obvious flaw is the smuggling in of "past and future events" as though they had to go together, when they obviously don't.
Or are you saying that neither past nor future events can be "smuggled in"?I'm not actually sure how I'm smuggling anything in. I'm simply juxtaposing two alternatives and saying if not this, then that.
Last edited: