Philosophy and Humanities I think, therefore I argue.


Advertisement (please log in or register to remove this ad)
Notices

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
  #31 (permalink)  
Old 07-02-2008, 05:39 AM
modest's Avatar
Creating
Points: 84,837, Level: 100 Points: 84,837, Level: 100 Points: 84,837, Level: 100
Activity: 100% Activity: 100% Activity: 100%
Hypography Staff Member
Moderator
 

Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: U.S. Midwest
Posts: 1,689
modest has a reputation beyond reputemodest has a reputation beyond reputemodest has a reputation beyond reputemodest has a reputation beyond reputemodest has a reputation beyond reputemodest has a reputation beyond reputemodest has a reputation beyond reputemodest has a reputation beyond reputemodest has a reputation beyond reputemodest has a reputation beyond reputemodest has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Movement Gives Meaning to Time

Quote:
Originally Posted by jedaisoul View Post
I agree that you have to have space to have movement, and I also agree that there is movement involved in the process of pigment fading (the earth rotating on its axis and around the sun). The question is, would the pigment fade anyway if there was no movement? I think that the answer is yes.
No. It's got nothing to do with the earth moving. Pigment fading is a chemical reaction. Chemical reactions are the movement of molecules. Atoms bond with different molecules and create different molecules. All of that is movement. When I say pigment cannot fade without space and time or movement that's what I'm referring to. It also would be impossible for light to bump into the pigment in order to initiate the chemistry that results in change without movement.

Nothing can change or move without space and time. No example can be given otherwise - it's a simple fact of geometry. Movement is space/time.

~modest
__________________
Reply With Quote
Advertisement
  #32 (permalink)  
Old 07-03-2008, 01:52 AM
Creating
Points: 20,673, Level: 62 Points: 20,673, Level: 62 Points: 20,673, Level: 62
Activity: 17% Activity: 17% Activity: 17%
 

Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 1,025
coberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to all
Re: Movement Gives Meaning to Time

I would say that Becker and Lakoff are my principal teachers in matters of human nature. These teachers inform me that the ‘id’ or the ‘it’ is the ground from which the ‘I’ is born. The id is instinctive life undignified by conscious control.

The id is instinctive reactive control and the ‘ego’ is the word we have assigned to indicate the human “organ” that develops control of the id and distinguishes the human animal from the other animals. The ego gives coherence and order to the activities of the brain.

Without the ego all other animals know not time; humans know time because they alone know of their own death. Psychoanalysis claims that the ego creates time by “binding” it, i.e. “the individual gives the world of events a fixed point of self-reference”…This is what allows man to live in a symbolic world of his own creation.” Other animals live in the continual world of “now”.
Reply With Quote
  #33 (permalink)  
Old 07-03-2008, 02:08 AM
Understanding
Points: 12,550, Level: 48 Points: 12,550, Level: 48 Points: 12,550, Level: 48
Activity: 0% Activity: 0% Activity: 0%
 

Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: England, UK
Posts: 297
jedaisoul is a glorious beacon of lightjedaisoul is a glorious beacon of lightjedaisoul is a glorious beacon of lightjedaisoul is a glorious beacon of lightjedaisoul is a glorious beacon of lightjedaisoul is a glorious beacon of light
Re: Movement Gives Meaning to Time

Quote:
Originally Posted by modest View Post
Nothing can change or move without space and time. No example can be given otherwise - it's a simple fact of geometry. Movement is space/time.
I agree that movement is impossible without space and time. I'm just not sure that the same is true of change. I see change as, in principle, being dependent on time, but not necessarily on space. However, I agree that I cannot think of an example of change that does not involve space. Therefore I must concede that it is conceivable that change unavoidably implies motion.
Reply With Quote
  #34 (permalink)  
Old 07-04-2008, 07:54 AM
paigetheoracle's Avatar
Thinking
Points: 19,288, Level: 60 Points: 19,288, Level: 60 Points: 19,288, Level: 60
Activity: 7% Activity: 7% Activity: 7%
 

Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 720
Blog Entries: 3
paigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to all
Re: Movement Gives Meaning to Time

The way I see time is a measurement of change. I'd also say that time cannot occur without motion (Point A to point B) and is just a way of combining the two as a concept
__________________
'Are you pondering what I'm pondering?' (Pinky & The Brain)
Reply With Quote
  #35 (permalink)  
Old 07-06-2008, 03:40 AM
Creating
Points: 20,673, Level: 62 Points: 20,673, Level: 62 Points: 20,673, Level: 62
Activity: 17% Activity: 17% Activity: 17%
 

Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 1,025
coberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to allcoberst is a name known to all
Re: Movement Gives Meaning to Time

I have been reading “The Meaning of the Body” by Mark Johnson, the coauthor of “Philosophy in the Flesh” with George Lakoff.

In writing about our human visceral level of contact with the world Johnson points out the philosophical nature of “objects” and “subjects” as portrayed by Kant, Dewey, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty.

Kant points out that “subject” and “object” are counterparts inseparable in experience. Maurice and Dewey show us “that subjects and objects are abstractions from the interactive process of experience out of which emerge what we call people and things. There is no split of self and other in the primacy of our experience, and so we are never utterly separated from things.”

I wonder if it might be proper to think of space as the contribution of the ‘outer world’ whereas time is the contribution of our ‘inner world’ to experience.

Movement is the tie that binds the outer world with the inner world as the foundation of experience.
Reply With Quote
  #36 (permalink)  
Old 07-07-2008, 12:02 AM
paigetheoracle's Avatar
Thinking
Points: 19,288, Level: 60 Points: 19,288, Level: 60 Points: 19,288, Level: 60
Activity: 7% Activity: 7% Activity: 7%
 

Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 720
Blog Entries: 3
paigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to allpaigetheoracle is a name known to all
Re: Movement Gives Meaning to Time

Quote:
Originally Posted by coberst View Post
I have been reading “The Meaning of the Body” by Mark Johnson, the coauthor of “Philosophy in the Flesh” with George Lakoff.

In writing about our human visceral level of contact with the world Johnson points out the philosophical nature of “objects” and “subjects” as portrayed by Kant, Dewey, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty.

Kant points out that “subject” and “object” are counterparts inseparable in experience. Maurice and Dewey show us “that subjects and objects are abstractions from the interactive process of experience out of which emerge what we call people and things. There is no split of self and other in the primacy of our experience, and so we are never utterly separated from things.”

I wonder if it might be proper to think of space as the contribution of the ‘outer world’ whereas time is the contribution of our ‘inner world’ to experience.

Movement is the tie that binds the outer world with the inner world as the foundation of experience.
Nicely put and I'd agree with this description of the last two points as for the Kant point, your post on the ego covers this I believe i,e, the brake on/break with reality that creates object/ subject as opposed to the connection that links both, welding the dichotomy together through action as opposed to separating it through thought (analysis is taking things apart to understand them as synthesis is putting them together to make them work)
__________________
'Are you pondering what I'm pondering?' (Pinky & The Brain)
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks
Advertisement


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
The Brights Movement The D.S. Philosophy and Humanities 2 02-12-2008
Movement orbsycli Music studies 6 01-26-2008
The 60's Movement ThisIsMyName History forum 16 10-01-2006
Enviromental Movement learnin to learn Earth science 6 10-19-2005
Movement of plates kingwinner Earth science 8 09-26-2005

» Advertisement
» Latest Science News
A Fine-Tooth Comb To Measure The Accelerating Universe
imageAstronomical instruments needed to answer crucial questions, such as the search for Earth-like planets or the way the Universe expands, have come a step closer with the first demonstration at the telescope of a new calibration system for precise spectrographs. The method uses a Nobel Prize-winning technology called a 'laser frequency comb', and is published in this week's issue of Science.
Read » | 0 comments

Fermilab physicists discover "doubly strange" particle
imagePhysicists of the DZero experiment at the U.S. Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory have discovered a new particle made of three quarks, the Omega-sub-b (Ωb). The particle contains two strange quarks and a bottom quark (s-s-b). It is an exotic relative of the much more common proton and weighs about six times the proton mass.
Read » | 0 comments

Stanford's 'autonomous' helicopters teach themselves to fly
imageStanford computer scientists have developed an artificial intelligence system that enables robotic helicopters to teach themselves to fly difficult stunts by watching other helicopters perform the same maneuvers. The result is an autonomous helicopter than can perform a complete airshow of complex tricks on its own.
Read » | 0 comments
» Current Poll
Do U text?
No - 35.29%
12 Votes
Yes; < 6 messages/day - 41.18%
14 Votes
Yes; 6-15 messages/day - 11.76%
4 Votes
Yes; 16 to 43 messages/day - 5.88%
2 Votes
Yes; > 43 messages/day - 2.94%
1 Vote
What? - 2.94%
1 Vote
Total Votes: 34
You may not vote on this poll.
» Random Social Groups
Astronomy Picture of the Day
9 members | 26 pictures
Science Fiction Buffs
7 members | 7 pictures
Wildflowers
17 members | 114 pictures
Guitarists
4 members | 0 pictures
Terra Preta
14 members | 1 pictures
» View All Groups
Advertisement

All times are GMT -8. The time now is 05:31 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.2.0 ©2008, Crawlability, Inc.
Copyright © 2000-2008 Hypography
Part of the Hypography - Science for Everyone Network