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Our attitudes towards an event may vary depending on whether the event has happened or has yet to take place. Philosophers and psychologists explore such psychological past/future asymmetries to reveal what kinds of asymmetries we exhibit, and under what conditions, and how they may reflect particular beliefs about time, or features of time itself.

Produktbeschreibung
Our attitudes towards an event may vary depending on whether the event has happened or has yet to take place. Philosophers and psychologists explore such psychological past/future asymmetries to reveal what kinds of asymmetries we exhibit, and under what conditions, and how they may reflect particular beliefs about time, or features of time itself.
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Autorenporträt
Christoph Hoerl is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Warwick. He studied Philosophy at the Munich School of Philosophy and University of Sussex before completing a DPhil at the University of Oxford. Together with Teresa McCormack, he led the AHRC project "Time: Between Metaphysics and Psychology" (2017-2019). Teresa McCormack is Professor and Head of School in the School of Psychology at Queen's University Belfast. She completed her undergraduate degree and PhD in Experimental Psychology at the University of Cambridge. Her work primarily focuses on the developmental psychology of time, and she has published extensively in this area. Together with Christoph Hoerl, she led the AHRC project "Time: Between Metaphysics and Psychology" (2017-2019). Alison Fernandes is Assistant Professor in Philosophy at Trinity College Dublin. She attained a PhD in philosophy from Columbia University, having previously completed degrees in philosophy, physics, and chemistry at the University of Sydney. She has held postdoctoral positions at the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Warwick, including on the AHRC project "Time: Between Metaphysics and Psychology".