Abstract
Gruber et al. (2022) and Buonomano and Rovelli (Forthcoming) aim to render Q18
consistent the picture of time delivered to us by physics, with the way time seems to us
in experience. Their general approach is similar; they take the picture of our world given
to us in physics, a picture on which there is no global “moving” present and hence no
robust temporal flow, and attempt to explain why things nevertheless seem to us as they
do, given that our world is that way. In this, they follow in the footsteps of Hartle (2005),
Callender (2017), and Ismael (2017), who argue that any information gathering system
(an IGUS) will, in learning to navigate our world, represent the distinctions between
past, present, and future, and represent their own changing trajectory through spacetime.
While we are generally very sympathetic to this approach, there are several places where
we disagree.