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Full Idea
There can be no time without movement.
Gist of Idea
There is no time without movement
Source
Aristotle (Coming-to-be and Passing-away (Gen/Corr) [c.335 BCE], 337a24)
Book Ref
Aristotle: 'The Basic Works of Aristotle', ed/tr. McKeon,Richard [Modern Library Classics 2001], p.528
A Reaction
See Shoemaker's nice thought experiment as a challenge to this. Intuition seems to cry out that if movement stopped for a moment, that would not stop time, even though there was no way to measure its passing.
13228 | There is no time without movement [Aristotle] |
20920 | If there were many cosmoses, each would have its own time, giving many times [Aristotle] |
1903 | If motion and rest are abolished, so is time [Sext.Empiricus] |
19384 | Space and time are the order of all possibilities, and don't just relate to what is actual [Leibniz] |
2100 | Space and time are purely relative [Leibniz] |
13181 | Time is the order of inconsistent possibilities [Leibniz] |
4189 | Time may be defined as the possibility of mutually exclusive conditions of the same thing [Schopenhauer] |
2608 | For McTaggart time is seen either as fixed, or as relative to events [McTaggart, by Ayer] |
2949 | We have the confused idea that time is a process of change [Lockwood] |
9504 | The relational view of space-time doesn't cover times and places where things could be [Bird] |