This book brings together, in a novel way, an account of the structure of time with an account of our language and thought about time. Joshua Mozersky argues that it is possible to reconcile the human experience of time, which is centred on the present, with the objective conception of time, according to which all moments are intrinsically alike. He defends a temporally centreless ontology along with a tenseless semantics that is compatible with - and indeed helps to explain the need for - tensed language and thought. This theory of time also, it is argued, helps to elucidate the nature of change and temporal passage, neither of which need be denied nor relegated to the realm of subjective experience only. The book addresses a variety of topics including whether the past and future are real; whether temporal passage is a genuine phenomenon or merely a subjective illusion; how the asymmetry of time is to be understood; the nature of representation; how something can change its properties yet retain its identity; and whether objects are three-dimensional or four-dimensional. It is a wide-ranging examination of recent issues in metaphysics, philosophy of language and the philosophy of science and presents a compelling picture of the relationship of human beings to the spatiotemporal world.
This work brings together an account of the structure of time with an account of our language and thought about time.
Rather than attempt to trace the development of his thought throughout these fifty years this book considers his most representative work, namely, The Mind and Its Place in Nature.
Odysseus ' solution ( made distinctly unrealistic because Homer has not considered his time frame , making these events occur at night instead of in the morning ) is to gather the rams together and bind them in threes , fastening one of ...
This has led to a burgeoning literature studying the nature of metaphysical and ontological disputes themselves. One major debate within this context concerns the language of ontology.
Part 6, “Summing Up,” contains a very useful overview of the central features of Tooley's approach to time. ... Michael Tooley, Causation: A Realist Approach (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987), and Time, Tense, and Causation (Oxford: ...
All except three of the papers in this volume were presented at the colloquium on "L'Ontologie formelle aujourd'hui", Geneva, 3-5 June 1988.
Now, since this Book has a rather tight composition, it would have been difficult to interpolate this new material without endangering intelligibility.
This book focuses on the interpretation of natural language with respect to specific domain knowledge captured in ontologies. The main contribution is an approach that puts ontologies at the center of the interpretation process.
21, 1999. http://research.swisslife.ch/Papers/data/smart/meta.ps. [Studer et al., 1996] R. Studer, H. Eriksson, J. H. Gennari, S. W. Tu, D. Fensel, and M. Musen: Ontologies and the configuration of problem-solving methods.
In Heidegger's "Being and Time", the author locates the main themes of Heidegger's seminal work within their historical context and, in the process, familiarizes the reader with the terminology and...