Most of this discussion has degraded to the point of talking past one another. No one it seems has taken the time to work out any common definition of time itself, which makes answering the question in the OP or reaching any consensus in the pursuing discussion, near impossible. Many here are talking past one another or simply arguing against the argument(s) of others.., without providing any clear definition of time, as a basis for any discussion. Or so it seems from someone attempting to follow the discussion as it jumps 10 to 20 posts in a session.
Time is an abstract construct we use to describe our experience and measurement of change, usually within the context of a previously agreed upon standard.., designated as a clock... Itself no more than a mechanism measuring some regular, systematic and uniform rate of change.
- Is time real? Yes, but in what context is it real?
- Does time flow? Again the answer is yes! But in what sense or manner does it flow?
Both of these questions can be answered by analogy, or comparison with the following.
- Are ideas real?
- Is consciousness real..? Does it flow?
- Is awareness real and does it flow?
- Are numbers and the mathematics based on numbers and abstract symbols real?
To all of the above the answer is yes, and yet none of the above have any direct physical existence in reality. Though they are all descriptive of reality in some way.
Time is an abstract concept we use to describe our experience of change in the world around us, and to our credit, even change in how we imagine the world beyond our direct observation, to take place. Time
t in mathematics, is as real as the numbers 1, 2, 3,... and the symbols we use to communicate sometimes complex ideas. However, within the context of experience, only as it describes change or the potential for change, is it real in itself.., and still even then without that change there is no time to discuss.
Is there a past, present and future? Certainly! Is it time from which the past and future emerge? No, it is change.., and change is sometime we measure and communicate through the abstract concept we call time.
We use time to describe both changes in physical systems and things, which though they may emerge from physical processes, have no independent physical substance.
- Ideas
- Dreams
- Consciousness and awareness
- And the logical extension of what we know from direct experience, to how we imagine what we cannot touch and/or measure directly...
Time is both real and an abstract concept used to describe change. It is a necessisary concept and component in understanding the world around us.., and in the mathematics we use to communicate, describe and explore aspects, of the world which would otherwise be beyond description and understanding.
One side comment, that is almost never considered, is that the world we see and experience is already the past. Even setting aside the fact that different forms of sensory information about our environment reaches us at different speeds.., it takes between 300 and 400 microseconds (or is it milliseconds?), to assemble that information into what we experience as NOW. We all live in the past, even as we believe it to be the present.