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In this book, fifteen authors from a wide spectrum of disciplines
(ranging from the natural sciences to the arts) offer assessments
of the way time enters their work, the definition and uses of time
that have proved most productive or problematic, and the lessons
their subjects can offer for our understanding of time beyond the
classroom and laboratory walls. The authors have tried, without
sacrificing analytical rigour, to make their contribution
accessible to a cross-disciplinary readership.
Each chapter reviews time's past and present application in its
respective field, considers the practical and logical problems that
remain, and assesses the methods researchers are using to escape or
resolve them. Particular attention is paid to ways in which the
technical treatment of time, for problem-solving and model-building
around specific phenomena, call on - or clash with - our intuitive
perceptions of what time is and does. The spans of time considered
range from the fractions of seconds it takes unstable particles to
disintegrate to the millions of years required for one species to
give way to another. Like all central conceptual words, time is
understood on several levels. By inviting input from a broad range
of disciplines, the book aims to provide a fuller understanding of
those levels, and of the common ground that lurks at their base.
Much agreement emerges - not only on the nature of the problems
time presents to modern intellectual thought, but also on the clues
that recent discoveries may offer towards possible solutions.
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