A Companion to the Philosophy of Time presents the broadest treatment of this subject yet; 32 specially commissioned articles - written by an international line-up of experts - provide an unparalleled reference work for students and specialists alike in this exciting field. _ The most comprehensive reference work on the philosophy of time currently available _ The first collection to tackle the historical development of the philosophy of time in addition to covering contemporary work _ Provides a tripartite approach in its organization, covering history of the philosophy of time, time as a…mehr
A Companion to the Philosophy of Time presents the broadest treatment of this subject yet; 32 specially commissioned articles - written by an international line-up of experts - provide an unparalleled reference work for students and specialists alike in this exciting field. _ The most comprehensive reference work on the philosophy of time currently available _ The first collection to tackle the historical development of the philosophy of time in addition to covering contemporary work _ Provides a tripartite approach in its organization, covering history of the philosophy of time, time as a feature of the physical world, and time as a feature of experience _ Includes contributions from both distinguished, well-established scholars and rising stars in the fieldHinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Heather Dyke is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Otago in New Zealand. She has published many articles on the philosophy of time, and is the author of Metaphysics and the Representational Fallacy (2008), and editor of Time and Ethics: Essays at the Intersection (2003) and From Truth to Reality: New Essays in Logic and Metaphysics (2009). Adrian Bardon is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He is the editor of The Future of the Philosophy of Time (2012) and author of A Brief History of the Philosophy of Time (2013).
Inhaltsangabe
Notes on Contributors xi
Acknowledgments xvii
Introduction 1 Heather Dyke and Adrian Bardon
Part I The History of the Philosophy of Time 7
1 Heraclitus and Parmenides 9 Ronald C. Hoy
2 Zeno's Paradoxes 30 Niko Strobach
3 Aristotle on Time and Change 47 Andrea Falcon
4 Determinism, Fatalism, and Freedom in Stoic Philosophy 59 Ricardo Salles
5 Creation and Eternity in Medieval Philosophy 73 Jon McGinnis
6 Newton's Philosophy of Time 87 Eric Schliesser
7 Classical Empiricism 102 Lorne Falkenstein
8 Kant and Time-Order Idealism 120 Andrew Brook
9 Husserl and the Phenomenology of Temporality 135 Shaun Gallagher
10 The Emergence of a New Family of Theories of Time 151 John Bigelow
11 The B-Theory in the Twentieth Century 167 M. Joshua Mozersky
Part II Time as a Feature of the Physical World 183
12 Time in Classical and Relativistic Physics 185 Gordon Belot
13 Time in Cosmology 201 Chris Smeenk
14 On Time in Quantum Physics 220 Jeremy Butterfield
15 Time in Quantum Gravity 242 Nick Huggett, Tiziana Vistarini, and Christian Wüthrich
16 The Arrow of Time in Physics 262 David Wallace
17 Time and Causation 282 Mathias Frisch
18 Time Travel and Time Machines 301 Douglas Kutach
19 The Passage of Time 315 Simon Prosser
20 Time and Tense 328 Heather Dyke
21 Presentism, Eternalism, and the Growing Block 345 Kristie Miller
22 Change and Identity over Time 365 Dana Lynne Goswick
Part III Time as a Feature of Human Experience 387
23 The Perception of Time 389 Barry Dainton
24 Transcendental Arguments and Temporal Experience 410 Georges Dicker
25 Memory 432 Jordi Fernández
26 Time in Mind 444 Julian Kiverstein and Valtteri Arstila
27 The Representation of Time in Agency 470 Holly Andersen
28 Temporal Indexicals 486 John Perry
29 Time - The Emotional Asymmetry 507 Caspar Hare
30 Evolutionary Explanations of Temporal Experience 521 Heather Dyke and James Maclaurin