|
|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
This volume addresses the question of time from the perspective of
the time of nature. Its aim is to provide some insights about the
nature of time on the basis of the different uses of the concept of
time in natural sciences. Presenting a dialogue between philosophy
and science, it features a collection of papers that investigate
the representation, modeling and understanding of time as they
appear in physics, biology, geology and paleontology. It asks
questions such as: whether or not the notions of time in the
various sciences are reducible to the same physical time, what
status should be given to timescale differences, or what are the
specific epistemic issues raised by past facts in natural sciences.
The book first explores the experience of time and its relation to
time in nature in a set of chapters that bring together what human
experience and physics enable metaphysicians, logicians and
scientists to say about time. Next, it studies time in physics,
including some puzzling paradoxes about time raised by the theory
of relativity and quantum mechanics. The volume then goes on to
examine the distinctive problems and conceptions of time in the
life sciences. It explores the concept of deep time in paleontology
and geology, time in the epistemology of evolutionary biology, and
time in developmental biology. Each scientific discipline features
a specific approach to time and uses distinctive methodologies for
implementing time in its models. This volume seeks to define a
common language to conceive of the distinct ways different
scientific disciplines view time. In the process, it offers a new
approach to the issue of time that will appeal to a wide range of
readers: philosophers and historians of science, metaphysicians and
natural scientists - be they scholars, advanced students or readers
from an educated general audience.
|
Time and Freedom (Paperback)
Christophe Bouton; Translated by Christopher Macann; Edited by (general) Anthony J. Steinbock
|
R813
Discovery Miles 8 130
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
Christophe Bouton's "Time and Freedom "addresses the problem of the
relationship between time and freedom as a matter of practical
philosophy, examining how the individual lives time and how her
freedom is effective in time. Bouton first charts the history of
modern philosophy's reengagement with the Aristotelian debate about
future contingents, beginning with Leibniz. While Kant, Husserl,
and their followers would engage time through theories of
knowledge, Schopenhauer, Schelling, Kierkegaard, and (later),
Heidegger, Sartre, and Levinas applied a phenomenological and
existential methodology to time, but faced a problem of the
temporality of human freedom. Bouton's is the first major work of
its kind since Bergson's "Time and Free Will "(1889), and Bouton's
"mystery of the future," in which the individual has freedom within
the shifting bounds dictated by time, charts a new direction.
|
|