Pensive the Ludicrous wrote:
Quote:
Pensive was arguing that since "time" and "space" are subjective qualities, that they therefore only exist as subjective things. We "create" them by imagining them to be. Which is only half the loaf. Yes. Our perception of time and space is created by us. Our means of interacting with time and space is created by us. But the actual reality of time and space is not. As I stated earlier, he is mixing physics and philosophy and assuming that because similar terms are used in both, that they mean the same things.
That was a good first try. Try again.
Look. It's been like 20 years since I took a philosophy course. I'm not going to quote you specific terms and arguments that match what you're learning today. Just as when I play chess, I don't act like because I can't remember that my opponent is using the "Fibronelli defense" that it means I'm not going to kick his butt (or not, depending on the day I'm having).
I know you love to quote the new stuff you've been learning in school. Some of us learned all that stuff long ago. In my case, I've largely discounted most of is as bogus BS tossed around by self-important idiots who think they're being clever by using ridiculously complex and inconsistent terminology to explain concepts that are really childishly simplistic. I suppose as a teaching tool, it's helpful, but once you "get" a handful of basic philosophical concepts, the rest is just memorization of minute variations on those basic themes.
It's new to you, so you think it's important. Trust me. It's not. And when you pontificate on about how such and such subject is really irrelevant because we all live in a subjective reality that doesn't really have true meaning outside of our own unique frames of reference, or some other such BS, it doesn't really produce anything useful to the conversation except that you're waaaaay too obsessed with the subject.
Who cares if time and space are purely subjective? Either there's always going to be someone subjectively observing it, or there wont. If there isn't, then I don't give a damn, now do I? So, for the sake of utility, can we just assume that things exist and events occur (usually in some order)? Pretty please?