D. H. Mellor
Auteur de Properties
A propos de l'auteur
Crédit image: University of Cambridge
Œuvres de D. H. Mellor
Welsh folk dances; an inquiry 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
Philosophy of Science: The Central Issues by Cover, J. A., Curd, Martin (1998) Paperback (1998) — Contributeur — 302 exemplaires
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Sexe
- male
Membres
Critiques
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 13
- Aussi par
- 7
- Membres
- 198
- Popularité
- #110,929
- Évaluation
- 4.1
- Critiques
- 5
- ISBN
- 31
- Langues
- 1
Hugh is someone who is very informed by those views and knows the physics of space and time very well. He uses his knowledge of those, and his philosophical arguments, to defend a view of time, where time is rather like space. I think the simplest way to put it is to say that there’s no such thing in reality as now, there’s nothing that marks out in fundamental reality, which time is now, any more than there’s something that marks out in the fundamental reality of space which place is here. Here is just where I am, and now is just the point in time which we’re thinking or uttering those words, so Hugh Mellor’s view has been called a block universe view of space and time.
Block universe in the sense that time is just one of the dimensions of space-time. It’s a view that is common in physics, that we should think of space-time as a whole, like a four-dimensional block. If you imagine things occurring within space-time are just regions of that block, four-dimensional regions of it, or what sometimes people call space-time worms. So, it’s called the block universe because time and space have the same ontological standing, that is to say, they exist in exactly the same way.… (plus d'informations)