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The perceptions and experience of the “passage” of time

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Authors

Riggs, Peter J.

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Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

The 'passage' of time is taken by most people to be an objective fact of everyday life. On the basis of both logical and physical arguments, a majority of philosophers and physicists have opted for the Block View of time in which this 'passage' is purely subjective. However, the feeling of the ‘passage’ of time has been left principally unaccounted for in the Block View. It is argued that there are two ways by which the (apparent) ‘passage’ of time is perceived by human beings and it is the combination of these perceptions that gives rise to the deep-seated impression on the conscious mind of a 'dynamic' nature of time. In postulating the existence of a specific kind of intrinsic structural difference between the two orientations of time within the Block View, a basis for these two perceptions may be provided.

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Citation

Source

The Philosophical Forum

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Access Statement

Open Access

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Restricted until

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