untermensche
Contributor
We don't NEED an explanation.
But basically this argument is nothing more than you saying time is infinite in the past because you say so.
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If there is time there is change. To say there was infinite time is the same as saying there was infinite change. It is much more than saying some dimension exists.
Time and change are related, but not synonymous.
Not that it matters; infinite change is not contradictory or impossible. Even if you are correct, and infinite time is the same as infinite change, you have not demonstrated the impossibility of either.
Nonetheless, change is measured over time. At any fixed point on the time dimension, there is no change.
Time is no more change, than space is movement.
If there is time there is change. You can't say time exists without also saying change exists as well.
One does not exist without the other.
If there is movement there is space. One does not exist without the other. That doesn't mean they are the same thing.
The difference you are ignoring is important.
Time and change are related, but not synonymous.
The argument does not say they are synonymous. Your argument is a strawman argument.
The argument is that if one exists the other must exist as well.
So if I say infinite time existed I also am saying infinite change took place.
And saying change is better than saying time because change incorporates space. Change takes place in space as well as in time.
And change is not simply a dimension.