Are you out of jail?GV1 wrote:He's a random thought, and I actually asked this amongst my Physics friends who were just a dumb founded as I was ...
The past can be measured with time. We can say something has happened seconds ago, minutes ago, hours ago, days ago etc. The future can also be measured as time. We can say "It's my birthday in 3 days". Or, "I'm going to bed at 3am".
But, how do you measure now? What time interval defines the now ... the present? What's happening now will be the past in a seconds time. By the time we realize what's happening now it becomes the past.
So this leads me onto the next part. The past doesn't exist, it's happened. The future doesn't exist, it's not yet happened. This is agreed in science. We only have memories of the past, and expectations of the future. Those points in time do not exist though.
So, here's the thing. Does the present actually exist? If we can't define the present, how do we know it exists? As I said, by the time you realize something is happening now, it's already happened and becomes the past. Logically, the now does exist, but how can you prove it?
René Descartes famously quoted "l think, therefore l am". But even his viewpoint is purely philosophical.
Think about it a little bit. Then attempt to answer.
And to answer your philosophical rhetorical question, I feel the existence of the present when I have to perform an action where it requires the manipulation of time but I am unable to (i.e. waiting - for the bus, for BF's text/call, to get another life from Candy Crush). The act of waiting, for me, is the present. Also, when I want time to move faster or slower. Maybe those philosophers never had to wait so they never felt the present, or they had headphones and music playing. Earlier, I experienced the present because there was a long ass line at the checkout. So, I put on my headphones, next thing you know, I was in the future.
