Results for ' time and temporality'

968 found
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  1.  23
    Time and Temporality in the Garden.Mara Miller - 2010-09-24 - In Fritz Allhoff & Dan O'Brien (eds.), Gardening ‐ Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 178–191.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Chronos and Kairos Chronos and Scientific Time Climate and Garden Aesthetics Subjective Time Objective or Shared Time Cyclical Time The Garden's Times Moving Through the Garden Experiences of Time in the Garden Notes.
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  2.  97
    Time and temporality: A buddhist approach.Kenneth K. Inada - 1974 - Philosophy East and West 24 (2):171-179.
    The buddhist approach to the concepts of time and temporality is necessarily based on the correct understanding of the ordinary but dynamically oriented experiential process. in such a process, the concept of time takes on conventional, arbitrary and abstract natures, and subsequently gives way to the concept of temporality which is part and parcel of the experiential process and directly opens up other buddhist doctrines such as relational origination and voidness of being. temporality is non-conventional (...)
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  3. Time and temporality as mediators of science learning.Wolff‐Michael Roth, Kenneth Tobin & Stephen M. Ritchie - 2008 - Science Education 92 (1):115-140.
  4. Time and Temporal Experience.Barry Dainton - 2011 - In Adrian Bardon (ed.), The Future of the Philosophy of Time. London: Routledge. pp. 123-48.
     
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  5.  6
    Time and temporality in Sāṁkhya-yoga and Abhidharma Buddhism.Braj Mohan Sinha - 1983 - New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers.
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  6.  18
    Time and temporality.Richard McKeon - 1974 - Philosophy East and West 24 (2):123-128.
  7. Time and Temporality in European Modernism (1900‑1950).Jan Baetens, Sascha Bru, Dirk de Geest, David Martens & Robin Vogelzang (eds.) - 2016
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  8. Time and Temporal Attitude Asymmetries.Neil McKinnon - unknown
    (1) Certain of our intentional attitudes appear to have time-asymmetric manifestation conditions. For instance, we dread a certain painful episode only if (we believe) it is future and feel relief about that episode only when (we believe) it is past. We eagerly anticipate events only when they are future and regard them with nostalgia only when they are past.
     
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  9. Time and temporality in the garden.Mara Miller - 2010 - In Fritz Allhoff & Dan O'Brien (eds.), Gardening - Philosophy for Everyone: Cultivating Wisdom. Wiley-Blackwell.
  10. Time and temporality: The chinese perspective.Shu-hsien Liu - 1974 - Philosophy East and West 24 (2):145-153.
    Although the chinese have a heightened sense of time, The concepts of time and temporality developed in their culture are remarkably different from those developed in the west. Certain time-Concepts familiar to the westerners are completely lacking in the chinese tradition. For example, The chinese lacked the concept of absolute time as that held by newton, They also lacked a system to record the years in a linear progressive way, And they seem to have shown (...)
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  11.  15
    Cueing in Theatre: Timing and Temporal Variance in Rehearsals of Scene Transitions.Stefan Norrthon - 2023 - Human Studies 46 (2):199-219.
    This video-ethnographic study explores how professional actors and a director at the end of a theatrical rehearsal process coordinate transitions between rehearsed scenes. This is done through the development and use ofcues, that is, ‘signals for action’. The aim is to understand how cues are developed and how timing in transitions is achieved by using the designed cues. Work on three different scene transitions is analysed using multimodal Conversation Analysis. The results show that cueing is a central tool for developing (...)
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  12.  37
    An introductory note on time and temporality.Wei-ming Tu - 1974 - Philosophy East and West 24 (2):119-122.
  13.  29
    The relation between reaction time and temporal location of the stimulus on the tremor cycle.J. Tiffin & F. L. Westhafer - 1940 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 27 (3):318.
  14.  51
    Time and Temporality in Intercultural Perspective.Douwe Tiemersma & Henk Oosterling (eds.) - 1996 - Rodopi.
    How to repeat what never has been? Heinz Kimmerle Introduction We do not know what time is. Is it something outside us, just passing by like a car on the ...
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  15.  5
    Time and the Museum: Literature, Phenomenology, and the Production of Radical Temporality.Jen Walklate - 2022 - Routledge.
    "Time and the Museum: Literature, Phenomenology, and the Production of Radical Temporality, is the first explicit in-depth study of the nature of museum temporality. It argues as its departure point that the way in which museums have hitherto been understood as temporal in the scholarship - as spaces of death, othering, memory and history - is too simplistic, and has resulted in museum temporality being reduced to a strange heterotopia (Foucault) - something peculiar, and thus black (...)
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  16.  4
    Deep Time and Microtime: Anthropocene Temporalities and Silicon Valley’s Longtermist Scope.Jakko Kemper - 2024 - Theory, Culture and Society 41 (6):21-36.
    Living in Anthropocene times entails living in relation to two seemingly separate temporalities – the microtime of digital operations and the deep time of geological upheaval. Though divergent, these temporalities are united by their unavailability to perception; microtime proceeds too fast to perceive directly, while deep time is too vast to apprehend. Taking these temporalities as a point of departure, this paper develops three arguments. First, it asserts that the temporalities of deep time and microtime increasingly impact (...)
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  17.  32
    Toward a typology of time and temporality in the ancient indian tradition.Raimundo Panikkar - 1974 - Philosophy East and West 24 (2):161-164.
  18.  11
    Are We in Time?: And Other Essays on Time and Temporality.Charles M. Sherover - 2003 - Northwestern University Press.
    The summa of a distinguished philosopher's career, and full treatment of the temporal in philosophical terms, this volume shows us that by taking time seriously we can discover something essential to almost every question of human concern. Are we IN time? Charles Sherover asks, and in pursuing this question he considers time in conjunction with cognition, morality, action, physical nature, being, God, freedom, and politics. His essays, while drawing upon Royce, Heidegger, Kant, Leibniz, and even Hartshorne and (...)
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  19. Actual Time and Possible Change: A Problem for Modal Arguments for Temporal Parts.Michael T. Traynor - 2013 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 2 (2):180-189.
    Sider (2001) and Hawley (2001) argue that, in order to account for the mere possibility of change, temporal parts must be as fine-grained as possible change, and hence as fine-grained as time. However, when dealing with metaphysical possibility, the fine-grainedness of actual time and the fine-grainedness of possible change can come apart. Once this is taken into account, we see that, on certain assumptions about the actual microstructure of time, the modal arguments of Sider and Hawley lead (...)
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  20.  49
    Space-to-time mappings and temporal concepts.Kevin Ezra Moore - 2006 - Cognitive Linguistics 17 (2):199–244.
    Most research on metaphors that construe time as motion (motion metaphors of time) has focused on the question of whether it is the times or the person experiencing them (ego) that moves. This paper focuses on the equally important distinction between metaphors that locate times relative to ego (the ego-based metaphors Moving Ego and Moving Time) and a metaphor that locates times relative to other times (sequence is relative position on a path). Rather than a single abstract (...)
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  21.  12
    Time and Timelessness: Temporality in the Theory of Carl Jung.Angeliki Yiassemides - 2013 - Routledge.
    _Time and Timelessness_ examines the development of Jung's understanding of time throughout his opus, and the ways in which this concept has affected key elements of his work. In this book Yiassemides suggests that temporality plays an important role in many of Jung's central ideas, and is closely interlinked with his overall approach to the psyche and the cosmos at large. Jung proposed a profound truth: that time is relative at large. To appreciate the whole of our (...)
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  22.  87
    Modal and temporal logics for abstract space–time structures.Sara L. Uckelman & Joel Uckelman - 2007 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 38 (3):673-681.
    In the 4th century BC, the Greek philosopher Diodoros Chronos gave a temporal definition of necessity. Because it connects modality and temporality, this definition is of interest to philosophers working within branching time or branching space-time models. This definition of necessity can be formalized and treated within a logical framework. We give a survey of the several known modal and temporal logics of abstract space-time structures based on the real numbers and the integers, considering three different (...)
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  23.  87
    The buddhist conception of time and temporality.David J. Kalupahana - 1974 - Philosophy East and West 24 (2):181-191.
  24. Relationism about Time and Temporal Vacua.Matteo Morganti - 2017 - Philosophy 92 (1):77-95.
    A critical discussion of Shoemaker's argument for the possibility of time without change, intended as an argument against relationist conceptions of time. A relational view of time is proposed based on the primitive identity of events (or whatever entities are the basic subjects of change and lack thereof).
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  25.  22
    Time and trace: multidisciplinary investigations of temporality.Sabine Gross (ed.) - 2016 - Boston: Brill.
    Scholars in the arts, the humanities, and the sciences offer a multi-faceted investigation of the fundamental human experience of temporality--from reproductive politics and temporal logic to music and theater, from law to sustainability, from memory to the Vikings.
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  26.  15
    On Time and Imagination: De Spiritu Fantastico. De Tempore.Robert Kilwardby - 1987 - New York: Published for the British Academy by the Oxford University Press. Edited by P. Osmund Lewry, Alexander Broadie & Robert Kilwardby.
    The second volume in this series devoted to the writings of the English Dominican Robert Kilwardby, this work presents the Latin text of two Oxford treatises from the 1250s--one on time, the other on imagination. The treatise on time discusses its reality, connection with change, unity and beginning, the instant and time's relationship to eternity; the one on imagination examines the way imagery is acquired, retained and transmitted, and the relation between heart and head in the workings (...)
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  27.  31
    Systematicity and Temporality in Being and Time.Stephan Käufer - 2002 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 33 (2):167-187.
  28.  26
    Life, Time, and the Organism: Temporal Registers in the Construction of Life Forms.Dominic J. Berry & Paolo Palladino - 2019 - Journal of the History of Biology 52 (2):223-243.
    In this paper we articulate how time and temporalities are involved in the making of living things. For these purposes, we draw on an instructive episode concerning Norfolk Horn sheep. We attend to historical debates over the nature of the breed, whether it is extinct or not, and whether presently living exemplars are faithful copies of those that came before. We argue that there are features to these debates that are important to understanding contemporary configurations of life, time, (...)
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  29.  63
    Both Earlier Times and the Future Are “Front”: The Distinction Between Time- and Ego-Reference-Points in Mandarin Speakers’ Temporal Representation.Chengli Xiao, Mengya Zhao & Lei Chen - 2018 - Cognitive Science 42 (3):1026-1040.
    Mandarin speakers, like most other language speakers around the world, use spatial terms to talk about time. However, the direction of their mental temporal representation along the front-back axis remains controversial because they use the spatial term “front” to refer to both earlier times and the future. Although the linguistic distinction between time- and ego-reference-point spatiotemporal metaphors in Mandarin suggests a promising clarification of the above controversy, there is little empirical evidence verifying this distinction. In this study, Mandarin (...)
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  30.  5
    Severity and Temporality in Healthcare Priority Setting – A Case for A Condition-specific Affectable Time-neutral Approach.Lars Sandman & Niklas Juth - forthcoming - Health Care Analysis:1-18.
    Priority setting of scarce resources in healthcare is high on the agenda of most healthcare systems implying a need to develop robust foundations for making fair allocation decisions. One central factor for such decisions in needs-based systems, following both empirical studies and theoretical analyses, is severity. However, it has been noted that severity is an under-theorized concept. One such aspect is how severity should relate to temporality. There is a rich discussion on temporality and distributive justice, however, this (...)
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  31.  38
    Time and educational (re-)forms—Inquiring the temporal dimension of education.Mathias Decuypere & Pieter Vanden Broeck - 2020 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 52 (6):602-612.
    Volume 52, Issue 6, June - July 2020, Page 602-612.
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  32.  9
    Space, Time and Natural Law: A Peircean Look at Smolin’s Temporal Naturalism.Cornelius de Waal - 2016 - SCIO Revista de Filosofía 12:143-162.
    In Time Reborn and elsewhere physicist Lee Smolin identifies Peirce as a precursor to his view that natural laws evolved, a view that runs counter the received opinion within physics that time isn’t real. After discussing Smolin’s arguments for the reality of time, two approaches advoacated by Smolin –cosmological natural selection and Quantum Energetic Causal Set Theory– are discussed in the context of Peirce’s cosmology. It is shown that Peirce’s approach provides a possible ground for a physical (...)
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  33. Real Time And Imaginary Times. On The Husserlian Conception Of Temporal Individuation / Le Temps Reel Et Les Temps Imaginaires. Sur La Conception Husserlienne De L’individuation Temporelle.Rudolf Bernet - 2002 - Studia Philosophica 2.
    Après avoir donné une idée générale du processus d’individuation chez Husserl, l’étude analyse minutieusement la manière dont la temporalité propre aux actes de la perception interne et externe, du ressouvenir et de la phantasia constitue, d’après les Manuscrits de Bernau, l’individualité de l’objet intentionnel. Une attention toute particulière est accordée à ce qui distingue les objets fictifs des objets idéaux et qui permet de leur attribuer une forme spécifique d’individuation . L’étude apporte également des éclaircissements en ce qui concerne la (...)
     
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  34.  40
    Temporal control at work: Qualitative time and temporal injustice in the workplace.Chi Kwok - 2021 - Journal of Social Philosophy 53 (2):221-238.
    Journal of Social Philosophy, Volume 53, Issue 2, Page 221-238, Summer 2022.
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  35.  12
    Universities in the flux of time: an exploration of time and temporality in university life.Paul Gibbs (ed.) - 2015 - New York: Routledge.
    Higher education and the institution of the university exist in time, their essential nature now continually subject to change; change in students, in knowledge, in structure and in their own communities and those service. The nature of time in all the contemporary work on the university has been largely overlooked. This is an important omission and Universities in the Flux of Time has gathered leading academics whose contributions to the volume raise a debate as to the influence (...)
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  36. Meaning in time: on temporal externalism and Kripkenstein’s skeptical challenge.Jaakko Reinikainen - 2022 - Synthese 200 (288):1-27.
    The main question of metasemantics, or foundational semantics, is why an expression token has the meaning (semantic value) that it in fact has. In his reading of Ludwig Wittgenstein’s later work, Saul Kripke presented a skeptical challenge that threatened to make the foundational question unanswerable. My first contention in this paper is that the skeptical challenge indeed poses an insoluble paradox, but only for a certain kind of metasemantic theory, against which the challenge effectively works as a reductio ad absurdum (...)
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  37.  21
    Time in History: The Evolution of Our General Awareness of Time and Temporal Perspective. G. J. Whitrow.Carlene Stephens - 1990 - Isis 81 (2):312-313.
  38. Are We in Time?: And Other Essays on Time and Temporality.Gregory R. Johnson (ed.) - 2004 - Northwestern University Press.
    The summa of a distinguished philosopher's career, and full treatment of the temporal in philosophical terms, this volume shows us that by taking time seriously we can discover something essential to almost every question of human concern. Are we IN time? Charles Sherover asks, and in pursuing this question he considers time in conjunction with cognition, morality, action, physical nature, being, God, freedom, and politics. His essays, while drawing upon Royce, Heidegger, Kant, Leibniz, and even Hartshorne and (...)
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  39.  27
    Time and Some Temporal Notions: A Vaiśeşika Analysis.Maitreyee Datta - 2021 - Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research 39 (1):25-32.
    Vaiśeşikas are realist philosophers of classical India. They admit time (kāla) as a ubiquitous real substance. In this paper, our aim is to discuss such a determination of time following sixth century Vaiśeşika scholar Praśastapāda and a few of his interpreters, Vyomaśivācārya and Udayanācārya. This paper is an effort to state realist philosophers’ understanding of time and also to highlight how in classical Indian tradition, interpretations paved the way for proving the reality of time. The application (...)
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  40.  79
    Scientific time and the temporal sense of human existence: Merleau-ponty and Mead.Patrick L. Bourgeois & Sandra B. Rosenthal - 1990 - Research in Phenomenology 20 (1):152-163.
  41.  18
    Temporal Concept Drift and Alignment: An Empirical Approach to Comparing Knowledge Organization Systems Over Time.Jane Greenberg, Peter Melville Logan and & Sam Grabus - 2022 - Knowledge Organization 49 (2):69-78.
    This research explores temporal concept drift and temporal alignment in knowledge organization systems. A comparative analysis is pursued using the 1910 Library of Congress Subject Headings, 2020 FAST Topical, and automatic indexing. The use case involves a sample of 90 nineteenth-century Encyclopedia Britannica entries. The entries were indexed using two approaches: 1) full-text indexing; 2) Named Entity Recognition was performed upon the entries with Stanza, Stanford’s NLP toolkit, and entities were automatically indexed with the Helping Interdisciplinary Vocabulary application, using both (...)
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  42. Measuring time and other spatio-temporal quantities.Hartmut Traunmüller - 1998 - Apeiron 5 (3-4):213-218.
    Ordinary clocks do not measure time in the common and Newtonian sense, and there is a similar problem for spatial measurements due to effects of motion and gravitation. Einstein’s theories of relativity are based on the denial of the possibility of the ‘absolute’ measurements that would be required. Nevertheless, here it is shown how such measurements can be performed. For this purpose, a “light clock” (or equivalent) is linked with a “space-time odometer” that counts the zero crossings in (...)
     
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  43.  31
    On knots and temporality: a relational view of time.Farhang Hadad Farshi - 2023 - Synthese 202 (3):1-17.
    In a class of quantum gravity approaches it is indicated that our observable world emerges out of a fundamental structure that appears highly resistant to any clear spatial or temporal interpretation. In this work we are examining an analogue quantum system that appears to simulate such an unintuitive structure: the emergence of the so called topological phase of matter depicted by the Chern–Simons gauge theory. By investigating the proposed analogy from the lens of category theory, we offer a clear interpretation (...)
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  44. Chronicity and Temporality: A Revisionary Hermeneutics of Time.Subhasis Chattopadhyay - 2015 - Prabuddha Bharata or Awakened India 120 (10):606-609.
    This is a rethinking of the problems posed by time; especially European concepts of time.
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  45. Between time and eternity : neoplatonic precursors to Cusanus' conception of "non-temporal time" in De aequalitate.Elizabeth Brient - 2019 - In Gerald Christianson & Thomas M. Izbicki (eds.), Nicholas of Cusa and times of transition: essays in honor of Gerald Christianson. Boston: Brill.
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  46. The logic of time: a model-theoretic investigation into the varieties of temporal ontology and temporal discourse.Johan van Benthem - 1991 - Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    The subject of Time has a wide intellectual appeal across different dis ciplines. This has shown in the variety of reactions received from readers of the first edition of the present Book. Many have reacted to issues raised in its philosophical discussions, while some have even solved a number of the open technical questions raised in the logical elaboration of the latter. These results will be recorded below, at a more convenient place. In the seven years after the first (...)
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  47.  96
    Technics and time.Bernard Stiegler - 1998 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    At the beginning of Western philosophy, Aristotle contrasted made objects, which did not have the source of their own production within themselves, with beings formed by nature. This distinction persisted until Marx, who conceived of the possibility of an evolution of the technical object. This philosophy developed while industrialisation was in the process of overthrowing the contemporary order of social organisation, which highlighted technology's new place in philosophical enquiry. Bernard Stiegler goes back to the beginning of Western philosophy and revises (...)
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  48.  60
    Sex, Time and Love: Erotic Temporality.M. C. Dillon - 1987 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 18 (1-2):33-48.
  49. Time and spatial models: Temporality in Husserl.Mary Jeanne Larrabee - 1989 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 49 (3):373-392.
    Recent treatments of time in husserl purport to give an account of the most fundamental aspects of what husserl terms inner time-Consciousness, The immanent temporality that is the primal constitutive source of human experience. A major difficulty with these presentations of husserl's time-Theory is that they continue to use theoretically reductionist models for time, Based on a sense of "flow" that is drawn from objective-Physical space and objects extended through such space. Such treatments fail to (...)
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  50.  17
    Ethnographies of Youth and Temporality: Time Objectified.Anne Line Dalsgard, Martin Frederiksen, Susanne Hojlund & Lotte Meinert (eds.) - 2014 - Temple University Press.
    As we experience and manipulate time—be it as boredom or impatience—it becomes an object: something materialized and social, something that affects perception, or something that may motivate reconsideration and change. The editors and contributors to this important new book, _Ethnographies of Youth and Temporality, _have provided a diverse collection of ethnographic studies and theoretical explorations of youth experiencing time in a variety of contemporary socio-cultural settings. The essays in this volume focus on time as an external (...)
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