I still don't see the special. There are a whole lot of people who the spacial positions I've been in
OK, so their "here" at some point in time can match (in ECEF geocentric coordinate space) your "here" at some other point in time. But how does that relate to my assertion that the spatial delta between your "here" and my "here" varies freely (which INCLUDES your potential overlap at disneyland but does not require it), while the time distance from your "now" and my "now" is always zero, plus or minus relativistic fuzziness. Your observation seems quite consistent.
Also, the time distance is only zero to people who you are currently interacting. Your time distance to Newton is significantly more, or to you yesterday.
Heh heh. As I see it, you are reinforcing my point. First, I would agree that we can only *perceive* the (approximately) zero distance between our "now" and somebody else's "now" when we are interacting with them. But it always happens when we do, whether we have been apart for a long or short time; that's remarkable. To use The Man's route 66 and my "convoy of consciousness", we can only perceive that others are in the convey when we look out the window towards their vehicle. But every time we look in that direction (interact with another conscious being) they are still there. Maybe they dissappeared when we looked away (between phone calls, say) and magically reappeared just when we interacted again (with zero time distance between nows), but probably their now still existed in between and was still there when we looked back out that window.
And, we have other reason to believe it. For example, if their "now" were to start verging into my "now" + 5 hours in the future, they might start winning a lot of lottery tickets, even if I wasn't interacting with them at the time (grin). I'm not entirely serious, because I'm not sure what effects it would have to have our consciousness at a different "now" location then other people - could it look like precognition? I don't know.
Anyway, even granted that we don't perceive the zero distance between our "nows" when we interact, that zero distance is still pretty interesting and quite unlike other dimensions.
As for Newton - he's no longer in the route 66 convoy. His consciousness no longer partakes of the shared now. His life history has a starting and ending point in the time dimension (which I concede physics handles well), but he's not part of "now", he's not riding the moving cursor. That's why we cannot interact with him. You and I could interact right now, by telephone (again, with milliseconds of time fuzziness), crossing space freely except for the (mostly light) limitation of c and relativity. Or I could fly there and talk in person. But we both equally cannot have a talk with Newton. It's not because we can't move to the physical lcoations (ECEF) where his "here" resided. And if I could move my "now" back a few hundred years so that it overlapped his "now", then we could interact. But that's my point - we cannot move our "now" cursor forward or back from the convoy's, cannot slow or speed it up - we are all in lockstep, moving our shared "now" one year further away from the absolute time of Newton's death every year, whether we want or not. Absent relativistic effects, your "now" moves just a fast away from Newton's death as mine does. But we can each move our "here" distances from his phsical home independently closer or further at will, because there is no lockstep of "here" as there is with "now".
By the way, I agree that this is somewhat about consciousness. In particular, one might say that the only existence of "now" is in the realm of consciousness, and that physics so far has not really grappled with consciousness in general successfully. From that viewpoint, I think that the concept of "now" is one of the bleeding edges of the gap between consciousness and hard science. "Now" cannot be measured or explained by science, so far as I can tell.
For some suitable definition of "real", that means that "now" is not real. But that would say more about how one chooses to define the English word "real" (what it includes and excludes) than about the actual fabric of reality; it's a change of the map, not the territory.
Anyway, that's why I consider the existence of a "now" dividing future and past to be a central unexplained mystery. I was hoping to get some ideas about dealing with "now" within science, and I did get some references and some good discussion.
Since you bring up the reversibility of time, by what mechanism do you recall the past but not the future? Yes, we can vaguely say "there is some kinda asymmetry because of entropy", but do you have any mechanism by which entropy has imprinted models of past events in your neurons but not of future ones? (Or why the craters of the moon reflect its past history but not its future?) If so, maybe that would give some hints for my question.
Thanks for the thoughts.
Zeph