Fr. 70.00

Three Concepts of Time

English · Paperback / Softback

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The existence of so many strangely puzzling, even contradictory, aspects of 'time' is due, I think, to the fact that we obtain our ideas about temporal succession from more than one source - from inner experience, on the one side, and from the physical world on the other. 'Time' is thus a composite notion and as soon as we distinguish clearly between the ideas deriving from the different sources it becomes apparent that there is not just one time-concept but several. Perhaps they should be called variants, but in any case they need to be seen as distinct. In this book I shall aim at characteri sing what I believe to be the three most basic of them. These form a sort of hierarchy of increasing richness, but diminishing symmetry. Any adequate inquiry into 'time' is necessarily partly scientific and partly philosophical. This creates a difficulty since what may be elementary reading to scientists may not be so to philosophers, and vice versa. For this reason I have sought to present the book at a level which is less 'advanced' than that of a specialist monograph. Due to my own background there is an inevitable bias towards the scientific aspects oftime. Certainly the issues I have taken up are very diffe rent from those discussed in several recent books on the subject by philoso phers.

List of contents

I. Time as a Many-Tiered Construct.- 1. The Problem Situation.- 2. The Objectivity1 of Time.- 3. The Objectivity2 of Time.- 4. The Problem of 'The Present'.- II. Temporal Processes.- 5. The Interplay of Chance and Causality.- 6. Thermodynamics and the Temporal Asymmetries.- 7. Temporal Ongoings in Biology.- 8. Time and Consciousness.- References.

Summary

The existence of so many strangely puzzling, even contradictory, aspects of 'time' is due, I think, to the fact that we obtain our ideas about temporal succession from more than one source - from inner experience, on the one side, and from the physical world on the other. 'Time' is thus a composite notion and as soon as we distinguish clearly between the ideas deriving from the different sources it becomes apparent that there is not just one time-concept but several. Perhaps they should be called variants, but in any case they need to be seen as distinct. In this book I shall aim at characteri sing what I believe to be the three most basic of them. These form a sort of hierarchy of increasing richness, but diminishing symmetry. Any adequate inquiry into 'time' is necessarily partly scientific and partly philosophical. This creates a difficulty since what may be elementary reading to scientists may not be so to philosophers, and vice versa. For this reason I have sought to present the book at a level which is less 'advanced' than that of a specialist monograph. Due to my own background there is an inevitable bias towards the scientific aspects oftime. Certainly the issues I have taken up are very diffe rent from those discussed in several recent books on the subject by philoso phers.

Product details

Authors K G Denbigh, K. G. Denbigh
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 05.12.2012
 
EAN 9783540107576
ISBN 978-3-540-10757-6
No. of pages 180
Weight 340 g
Illustrations VIII, 180 p.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Mathematics

B, TIME, Mathematics, Mathematics and Statistics, Mathematics, general, Objectivity, Invariant;Zeit;biology;causality;entropy;objectivity;time

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