Say that x is a four-dimensional mereological sum provided that x is a mereological sum with the property that not all of its parts exist at all the same times, i.e., x has parts a and b such that a exists at some time at which b does not. Mereological sums of stages will, typically, be four-dimensional mereological sums. Plausibly, a four-dimensional mereological sum exists at t provided that it overlaps the spacetime region of time t (times are spacelike hypersurfaces, I suppose).
- Without backwards causation, it is not possible to make it the case that an object did not exist yesterday.
- If there are four-dimensional mereological sums, then it is possible to make it the case that an object did not exist yesterday.
- Hence, there are no four-dimensional mereological sums.
Hey Alex,
ReplyDeleteWhat do you mean by making it the case that an object didn't exist yesterday? Is this an instance of it?
God promises me that if I push this button today, he will make it such that object O didn't come into existence yesterday. Given this promise, I can make it such that there is no O yesterday by pushing the button. I do so without recourse to backwards causation. My pushing the button isn't backwards causation; God's causing O not to exist isn't backwards causation, and the result is no O yesterday.
Tim
I don't know if causation can go through God. Say I pray that you have a good day, and because of this God gives you a good day. Have I caused it? If so, then I will say the same thing about the backwards case, and call it backwards causation.
ReplyDeleteBut if causation can't go through God, then your objection is solid. But then I modify the argument to say: "backwards causation or anything supernatural or otherwise spooky" instead of "backwards causation". :-)