Search
Search
Ethics, death and the block universe
Ethics, death and the block universe

Date

source

share

The four-dimensional block universe, supported by Einstein’s theory of relativity, is a world where past, present and future are equally real. Philosophers of time have debated about whether this makes a difference to issues like freedom, responsibility, and death. Arguing . . .

The four-dimensional block universe, supported by Einstein’s theory of relativity, is a world where past, present and future are equally real. Philosophers of time have debated about whether this makes a difference to issues like freedom, responsibility, and death. Arguing against the hopeless fatalism often associated with this theory, Nikk Effingham examines the philosophical details of the block universe and whether it truly affects our human experience.  Taffy Brodesser-Akner’s Fleishman is in Trouble is now a Hulu-filmed drama series. In it, Toby’s nine-year old son asks him about the block universe. ‘It’s a theory,’ Toby says. ‘It’s this idea that, like, all of life is happening at the same time. Like all points of existence are, I don’t know, occurring simultaneously.’ Weird as that theory may sound, it is now mainstream thinking for physicists and philosophers. You might believe, as the characters of Fleishman tacitly do, that the blo…

Read the full article which is published on IAI TV (external link)

More
articles

More
news

What is Disagreement?

What is Disagreement?

This is Part 1 of a 4-part series on the academic, and specifically philosophical study of disagreement. In this series...

Doing vs. Allowing Harm - Doing vs. Allowing Harm Is there a moral ...

Doing vs. Allowing Harm

[Revised entry by Fiona Woollard, Frances Howard-Snyder, and Charlotte Unruh on July 8, 2025. Changes to: Main text, Bibliography, notes.html]...

Conceptual Modeling and Ontological Analysis - ppt download

Sortals

[Revised entry by Max A. Freund and Richard E. Grandy on July 7, 2025. Changes to: Main text, Bibliography] Sortals...

Project X

Project X

My father spent at least 40 years of his life working to develop an internally-driven perpetual motion machine. And I...