xtifr
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2012
- Messages
- 1,299
You appear to be getting close. I only have one immediate quibble. (I may have more later, but this is the only one that springs out at me.)xtifr,
- Once again, I think that I understand what you're saying.
The highlighted bit sounds wrong, but I'm also not entirely sure what you think that means. The PSoS just is at the moment it occurs. It's not a continuous thing. It happens when you think of yourself, or access your memories and consider them from the context of the present.- You're saying that the reason the PSoS is fully defined prior to its actual existence is that it is defined by more than biology, or even chemistry -- it is also defined by its specific location in space and time.
The PSoS is an event or activity, not an object. The PSoS you may experience today is not the same PSoS as the one you may have experienced five years ago. It's a series of neurobiological events that happen in your brain, just as running is a series of events that happen in your legs. Memory is what gives it the illusion of continuousness.
Saying your PSoS is "fully defined prior to its actual existence" is like saying that your running is fully defined prior to its actual existence. It makes no sense, at least to me. What does it mean to "define" a particular instance of running?
The rest of your statement there seems to be an accurate summary, though.
- Then you're saying that Zeno's paradox doesn't apply here -- and we can't keep shrinking the space/time location and getting evermore PSoSs -- because of "Plank Length."
- How am I doing?
That also sounds basically correct, although there's no reason to put Planck Length in quotes. It's just a name. (I'll ignore the misspelling, since that's a common and logical mistake.)
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