Alright, let's make it clear again, that you haven't. The very first quote on
your page is this:
"What is time? I do not know." - Augustine
However, what St. Augustine actually said in the Confessions (Book XI, Chapter 14) is this:
"What, then, is time? If no one ask of me, I know; if I wish to explain to him who asks, I know not."
Right from the start, you misrepresent what he said and do not quote him accurately. Then you proceed to quote from him what you have posted already (snipped for brevity):
"For what is time? [...] and if there were nothing at all, there would be no present time."
"And I confess to thee, O Lord, that I am still ignorant as to what time is […] How, then, do I know this, when I do not know what time is?"
I gave each set of text a different color because they belong to two different chapters. The first is from chapter 14 and the second from chapter 25. Yet here you mingle both without distinction. You also ignore the sentence that follows in the paragraph from chapter 25:
"Or is it, perchance, that I know not in what wise I may express what I know?
See how this has the same form as the complete quote from chapter 14 above. It is not that he is ignorant as to what time is, but the issue is explaining what it is. As I have told you already, these passages are not dead ends but rhetorical questions and appeals to God as inner teacher that he makes before proceeding (as he does) to the solution of the difficulty in question.
Besides those quotes, in your page you ignore very much everything the saint actually said about the nature of time and the conclusions he reaches on the different chapters of Book XI. Despite this you say:
"Nothing could be more ironic than this revered theologian saying that he doesn't know what time is on earth but he knows what eternity is in heaven."
But your remark is confronted with something (and other things which I have posted already) the saint concludes on the chapter that follows your last quote:
“time is nothing else than distention” (Chapter 26). So your claim that he doesn’t know what time is and your appeal to isolated passages from Book XI to support your claim while ignoring everything else he said is a far cry from accurately quoting and representing him.
That said, I will not repeat myself here on this point. I have already showed on two previous posts on this thread (
here and
here) that your claim is incorrect and that you are not giving an accurate representation of his views on your page.
Moving down on your page, you also say that:
"He creates this problem because he misinterprets and misrepresents scripture when he states that time is "something" created by God.
Augustine "Thou madest all time and before all times thou art."
The reason Augustine believes that time is created is because he is a theologian and a philosopher, a Christian and a Platonist…"
And...
"Time is a characteristic of anything that exists and is active. Any kind of movement is a change of some type and incorporates time [...] Time does not exist in itself as something material or as an invisible form of energy."
But St. Augustine does not believes that time is "something" that exists in itself that is material or an invisible form of energy. When he says that God made all time he is not referring to the creation of time as "something" that exist in itself. Rather, time presupposes motion and the creation of a creature such as the heavens and the earth brings about that motion and thus time. So he says in the Confessions:
"Let them therefore see that there could be no time without a created being." (Book XI, Chapter 30)
Later, he expressed himself more fully on this point in City of God (Book XI, Chapter 6):
"For if eternity and time are rightly distinguished by this, that time does not exist without some movement and transition, while in eternity there is no change, who does not see that there could have been no time had not some creature been made, which by some motion could give birth to change [...] and thus, in these shorter or longer intervals of duration, time would begin? [...] And if the sacred and infallible Scriptures say that in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth, in order that it may be understood that He had made nothing previously [...] then assuredly the world was made, not in time, but simultaneously with time [...] But simultaneously with time the world was made, if in the world's creation change and motion were created..."
You say
“any kind of movement is a change of some type and incorporates time”, he says
“time does not exists without some movement and transition”. You say
“time is a characteristic of anything that exists”, he says
“there could be no time without a created being”.
If St. Augustine doesn’t know what time is, neither do you.
Evo