RussDill
Philosopher
You keep saying universal now. Does that have some sort of scientific definition? Providing an accurate definition would be the first step to determining if such a thing exists.
Like I said...
I am speaking about now in relation to a universal concept, but even one this planet, if you are one one side experiencing a night and I was on the other side experiencing a day, we still experience the same moment, only the subjective experience is different.
I am certain that my point need not be misunderstood.
Objectively, the universe is in a constant state of now, regardless of how it is subjectively observed.
On that, we should all be able to agree on.
The monument can serve as a sundial if it doesn't move. You would set up a radiating index around it like sundials typically have.
But you are going to have a problem if the monument moves like a reed swaying in the winds, or moves around like a live giraffe.
No. You just require an understanding that the universe is one thing happening in the same moment in relation to objectivity. The understanding can be subjective, but the actuality is objective.
That no individual has the ability to see everything that happens in the universe at any given moment, is besides the point, and there is no need to go outside the universe to have subjective verification that it is one thing. The mind is capable of being able to perceive of such a simple concept, provided that one accepts that the universe is one thing of itself and that all things happening within it are happening simultaneously in relation to that one thing.
Imagine there are 3 ships in space all in line maintaining equal distance between the 1st and 2nd, and 2nd and 3rd. There is no fixed reference to determine if they are in motion along the direction of the line they lie on.
The one in the middle emits a signal which is reflected back by both the others, the returned signals from both directions are recieved simultaneously by the middle ship regardless of whether they are all in motion or not.
According to the middle ship the reflections occurred simultaneously, but since there is no fixed reference to determine if the ships are moving or not then it's impossible to tell if the reflections did in fact occur simultaneously or if the reflection from one occurred before or after the reflection off the other.
For a universal now, i think you would require a fixed reference to the universe, an aether.
Just watch any live interview between someone in the studio and someone on the other side of the world. The delay is noticeable between any questions asked and answered given because of the distance it takes the signal to travel.
Imagine the two outer ships emit a signal at exactly the same instant.
Did you imagine this? Or were you unable to imagine it?
If you were able to imagine it, that is Navigator's 'universal now'
But that is relative to a third position, yours. To the ships, or to a fourth observer, they weren't emitted at exactly the same instant. There is no such thing as a universal "now", any more than there is a spatial universal 0,0,0.
I really am amazed that people are resorting to relativity as if they cannot simply go into their minds and understand such a simple concept without it. I wonder if that happens when people deride the imagination for long enough that they cease to have one.
People are resorting to special relativity because it is the best scientific theory we have to provide an answer to a question such as "is there a universal now?". The answer is no.
Intuition, imagination and "common sense" are insufficient tools to understand reality, especially outside the realm of direct human experience.
Within the environment that humans evolved in and directly experience, intuition can sometimes give "correct" answers to "simple" questions. On Earth and for all people on Earth there is indeed a "universal now". Because the relative motions of the various observers are very slow and distances very limited, the effects that give different observers different planes of simultaneity are negligible.
On a cosmological scale, that is not the case...
and we need (in this case) special relativity, not intuition, to find the correct answer.
People are resorting to special relativity because it is the best scientific theory we have to provide an answer to a question such as "is there a universal now?". The answer is no.
Based on Navigator's statements, I interpret the "Universal Now" to be the objective state of the universe at a given instant.
SR explains how observers would subjectively experience this objective universe.
I don't see how special relativity theory was created for that reason. It was created specifically to give coherence in relation to points of consciousness within the universe, not to somehow show that the universe didn't exist in space as a complete thing.
That is not my argument. By saying that yes for sure, the universe in its completeness is situated in NOW, regardless of individual points of consciousness experiencing that NOW at different points within it.
Surely that is simple enough for someone to acknowledge without invoking "if the math cannot verify it, then it cannot be the case"
One does not need math to understand such a simple concept.
What is 'not the case?
In what 'case'?
Are you thus agreeing with me that the universe exists as a whole thing, and that whole thing exist within the moment NOW?
Based on Navigator's statements, I interpret the "Universal Now" to be the objective state of the universe at a given instant.
SR explains how observers would subjectively experience this objective universe.