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The concept of time / Roger Teichmann

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : St. Martin's Press, Scholarly and Reference Division, 1995Description: x, 196 pages ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 0312127030
  • 9780312127039
  • 0333645502
  • 9780333645505
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • ARCH YNDC 115 T262C 20
LOC classification:
  • BD638 .T44 1995
Contents:
1. McTaggart's Argument -- 2. Facts, Knowledge and Belief -- 3. Truth-Conditions -- 4. Dates and Units -- 5. Periods and Instants -- 6. Time and Change -- 7. The Direction of Time -- Appendix: The Notion of a Criterion: Wright's Objections
Summary: Are past, present and future objective features of reality? What is an instant of time? Could time pass if nothing changed? In this book, the author attempts to show how considerations in the philosophy of logic and language are needed to settle these and other well-known issues. Part I deals with the debate over whether time is 'tensed' or 'tenseless'. Various problems are spelt out for the 'tenseless' view, and it is argued that the issue ends up hinging upon whether a genuinely tenseless language is conceivable. Part II has to do with periods and instants. The semantics of dates and of duration-terms are examined, and the notion of a durationless instant attacked. In Part III, the connections between time, change and causation are discussed. A criterial approach to the meanings of certain key temporal terms is adopted, yielding answers to a number of traditional metaphysical issues about time
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Archives Archives SAIACS Archives Room Yandell Collection ARCH YNDC 115 T262C (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 064944

Includes bibliographical references (pages 191-194) and index

1. McTaggart's Argument -- 2. Facts, Knowledge and Belief -- 3. Truth-Conditions -- 4. Dates and Units -- 5. Periods and Instants -- 6. Time and Change -- 7. The Direction of Time -- Appendix: The Notion of a Criterion: Wright's Objections

Are past, present and future objective features of reality? What is an instant of time? Could time pass if nothing changed? In this book, the author attempts to show how considerations in the philosophy of logic and language are needed to settle these and other well-known issues. Part I deals with the debate over whether time is 'tensed' or 'tenseless'. Various problems are spelt out for the 'tenseless' view, and it is argued that the issue ends up hinging upon whether a genuinely tenseless language is conceivable. Part II has to do with periods and instants. The semantics of dates and of duration-terms are examined, and the notion of a durationless instant attacked. In Part III, the connections between time, change and causation are discussed. A criterial approach to the meanings of certain key temporal terms is adopted, yielding answers to a number of traditional metaphysical issues about time

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