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DO CRY OVER SPILT MILK: POSSIBLY YOU CAN CHANGE THE PAST Peter B. M. Vranas Iowa State University Central APA, 28 April 2005
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INTRODUCTION It is widely agreed that changing the past is impossible. Even if time travel or backward causation is possible: it is then possible to affect but not to change the past. I will: Ê Distinguish transforming from replacing (and both from affecting) the past. Ë Argue that replacing the past counts (interestingly) as changing it. Ì Argue that, if affecting the past is possible, then so is replacing the past.
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OVERVIEW Part 1 AFFECTING, TRANSFORMING, AND REPLACING THE PAST Part 2 REPLACING THE PAST COUNTS AS CHANGING IT Part 3 IF AFFECTING THE PAST IS POSSIBLE, THEN SO IS REPLACING IT
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AFFECTING VS CHANGING THE PAST l I affect the past iff I have a causal effect on the past (and thus only if backward causation occurs). l I change the past iff I perform now an action which makes the past (qualitatively) different from what it is. l So I never in fact change the past, but this does not settle the questions of (1) whether it is possible that I change the past, and (2) whether I can change the past.
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TRANSFORMING VS REPLACING THE PAST l It is possible that I change the past iff there is a possible world w in which I make the past (in that world) different from what it is. But different from what it is in w or in a? Ê It is possible that I transform the past iff w t(at t I do something which makes the past of t in w different from the past of t in w). Ë It is possible that I replace the past iff w t(at t I do something which makes the past of t in w different from the past of t in a).
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OVERVIEW Part 1 AFFECTING, TRANSFORMING, AND REPLACING THE PAST Part 2 REPLACING THE PAST COUNTS AS CHANGING IT Part 3 IF AFFECTING THE PAST IS POSSIBLE, THEN SO IS REPLACING IT
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ANALOGY WITH REPLACING THE FUTURE l Suppose I’ll die in 2025. If I killed myself to- morrow, I would change the time of my death, so I would change the future in the sense of replacing: bringing about a nonactual future. l Changing the future is more interestingly un- derstood as replacing than as transforming it. l Similarly, if I went back to 1965 and changed the time of my birth, I would change the past in the sense of replacing: bringing about a nonactual past.
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OBJECTION: THEORIES OF CHANGE l 3-D theory (Mellor): A thing changes only if it has different properties at different times. l 4-D theory (Lewis): A thing changes only if there is a qualitative difference between different temporal parts of it. l The objection: Replacing the past does not amount to making it the case that the past has different properties at different times or that there is a qualitative difference between different temporal parts of the past.
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REPLY TO THE OBJECTION l My reply: When a new government takes of- fice, the government changes: the old govern- ment is replaced with (not transformed into) a new one. So replacing counts as changing, despite standard theories of change. l A response: Replacing a government differs from replacing the past. l My reply: The analogy need not show that replacing the past counts as changing, but does refute the objection from theories of change.
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OVERVIEW Part 1 AFFECTING, TRANSFORMING, AND REPLACING THE PAST Part 2 REPLACING THE PAST COUNTS AS CHANGING IT Part 3 IF AFFECTING THE PAST IS POSSIBLE, THEN SO IS REPLACING IT
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IF AFFECTING THE PAST IS POSSIBLE, SO IS REPLACING IT Premise: If it is possible to have a causal effect e on the past, then is possible to have an incompatible causal effect e' on the past. Conclusion: If it is possible to affect the past, then it is possible to replace the past. Proof: Suppose w(at t I cause e in the past of t in w). Then w'(at t I cause e', incompatible with e, in the past of t in w'). Suppose e does not obtain in a. Then w(at t I cause the past of t in w—which contains e—to differ from the past of t in a—which lacks e).
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OBJECTION: THE PAST IS ALREADY ACTUALIZED l The objection: Necessary, the past is already actualized, so it is impossible to now replace the past, to actualize a nonactual past. l My reply: (1) If an event is actualized when it occurs, to claim that in w I make the w-past differ from the a-past is not to deny that in w the w-past, and in a the a-past, is already actualized. (2) If an event is actualized when it is caused, then the past need not be fully actualized if backward causation is possible.
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IF I CAN AFFECT THE PAST, THEN I CAN REPLACE IT l I can do A It is possible that I do A. Premise: I can have incompatible causal effects e and e' on the past. Conclusion: I can replace the past. Proof: Suppose e does not obtain in a. Since I can cause e, I can make the past differ from the actual past: I can replace the past. l Objection: I can cause only what has already occurred. Reply: The objection presupposes that it is impossible to replace the past.
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CONCLUSION: THE FUTILITY OBJECTION l The objection: Suppose I now can prevent my father’s death in 1998. What is the point of telling me this? I know I will not prevent it. l My reply: Suppose I now can prevent my being fired in 2007. What is the point of telling me this if I know I will not prevent it? l The point may be to let me know that it will be my own fault: I will not exercise my power to prevent it. No futility need be involved. Similarly about the past.
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WHY I NEVER IN FACT REPLACE THE PAST l It is possible that I replace the past iff w t(at t I make the past of t in w differ from the past of t in a). l I in fact replace the past iff (in a) t(at t I make the past of t in a differ from the past of t in a). l It is possible that I transform the past iff w t(at t I make the past of t in w differ from the past of t in w). l I in fact transform the past iff (in a) t(at t I make the past of t in a differ from the past of t in a).
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