What is Metaphysics?. John Heil

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What is Metaphysics? - John Heil

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would seem to be at odds with a four-dimensional B series picture. When a tomato ripens, changing from green to red, what you really have are adjacent temporal parts or stages of the tomato. The tomato is analogous to a highway that passes through varied terrain. The highway is shady in some places, bumpy and in need of repair in others. These features of the highway are all there at once. Similarly, one temporal part of the tomato is green, another red. What you do not have is a persisting object that at one time is wholly green and, at a later time, wholly red. The tomato’s changing in color is really a matter of its parts – its temporal parts – being differently colored.

      In the same vein, despite appearances, when you walk to the store, there is not a single you fully occupying successive regions of space, leaving behind vacated regions. Instead, stages or temporal parts of you occupy adjacent regions of spacetime. Your temporal parts are strictly analogous to your spatial parts. Just as your right half and left half are distinct spatial parts of you, you yesterday, you today, and you tomorrow are portions of a temporally extended you.

      Even if you were sanguine about all this – and few are – you might worry about what happens to free will given a four-dimensional universe. We like to think that we control our destinies, at least up to a point: by acting today, you help make tomorrow what it is. But if a later you is merely a part of the same temporally extended entity that includes an earlier you, in what sense could you affect the future, even a little? You could no more bring it about that your future self is one way rather than another than one segment of a broomstick could bring it about that another segment has the character it does.

      This idea is so appalling to some philosophers that they regard it as a reason to rewrite physics. If that strikes you as special pleading, ask yourself how it could be rational for you to plan, as you assuredly do, for a future that is no more subject to your influence than the past is.

      Some philosophers think of spatial and temporal parts as parts of the occupants of space and time. On such a conception, your head and left hand are distinct spatial parts of you. What of your temporal parts? If these were parts of you analogous to your head and hand, you – all of you – would never be anywhere at any given time. The you here now is simply a slender piece of you. Many philosophers reject temporal parts thus conceived.

      I prefer to think of spatial and temporal parts differently. Your head and hand are not spatial parts of you, but parts of you that occupy particular regions of space. If you sit down and raise your hand, your head and hand swap their locations. Similarly, a temporal part of you is not a piece of you, but you at any given time.

      This way of thinking about spatial and temporal parts can escape notice because we often use locations in space and time to refer to their occupants. When you slice a tomato in half and give me the top half, you are giving me a portion of the tomato that once occupied a spatial region above another spatial region occupied by the bottom half of the tomato.

      Analogously, a temporal part of you is not one of a number of parts that make up you; it is you – the whole of you – at any given time.

      What are the options? Some philosophers, the presentists, agree with McTaggart that temporal passage requires the A series, but regard this as a feature, not a bug. Only the present is real, the only moments are present moments. The present moment is not something that arrives from the future and recedes into the past. Because the future and past are not on a par with the present, nothing could literally be in the past or future, no moment could be past, present, and future, so there is no incoherence.

      You do not need to be a four-dimensionalist to find temporal passage baffling. If time passes, at what rate does it pass? One second per second? Could time speed up or slow down, or pause, and for how long? If time passes or flows, this would require something for it to flow through. A river flows because the water it comprises moves relative to the terrain through which it flows. What would play the part of the terrain in the case of time?

      Space, maybe? Aside from worries about the physics of spacetime, this would seem to be at odds with the conviction that space, and its occupants, are themselves in time, participants in the flowing. If the terrain flowed with the river, however, in what sense would the river flow?

      I shall have more to say about the status of time in chapter 7. For the moment – ha! – the discussion will have served its purpose if it has convinced you that the problem of reconciling appearance and reality is inescapable, not something cobbled together by philosophers engaged in unconstrained flights of fancy.

      A series and B series.J. M. E. McTaggart’s labels for two ways we have of ordering occurrences in time. The A series is indexical, agent-centered. Just as “here” refers to the current spatial location of the speaker, “today” refers to the speaker’s temporal location. Yesterday, today, and tomorrow belong to the A series. The B series locates occurrences in relation to one another in time, not relative to the speaker. Unlike something’s being here now, something’s occurring before, after, or simultaneous with another is eternally true, not indexed to the spatial and temporal location of the speaker.Four-dimensionalism.As used here, the phrase refers to conceptions as “spacelike,” a dimension in addition to the three spatial dimensions. An object persisting through time is extended both spatially and temporally.Temporal part.Used here to refer to an object at a time or over a stretch of time. You yesterday, you today, and you tomorrow are temporal parts of you in the way your left half and right half are spatial parts of you. On this conception of temporal parts, objects persisting over time are not made up of temporal parts. Objects’ temporal parts are ways of dividing up whole objects analogous to dividing Earth into Southern and Northern hemispheres. Thus conceived, spatial and temporal parts are not to be confused with the material occupants of a spatial region or temporal interval.

      D. C. Williams’ “The Myth of Passage” (Journal of Philosophy 48 [1951]: 457–72) contains an accessible and influential discussion

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