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Single Idea 14003

[filed under theme 27. Natural Reality / D. Time / 2. Passage of Time / d. Time series ]

Full Idea

Theories of time are in two broad categories, the tenseless and the tensed theories. In tenseless theories, all times are equally real, as are all objects located at them, and there is no passage of time from future to present to past. It's the B-series.

Gist of Idea

Time is tensed or tenseless; the latter says all times and objects are real, and there is no passage of time

Source

Craig Bourne (A Future for Presentism [2006], Intro IIa)

Book Ref

Bourne,Craig: 'A Future for Presentism' [OUP 2006], p.3


A Reaction

It might solve a few of the problems, but is highly counterintuitive. Presumably it makes the passage of time an illusion, and gives no account of how events 'happen', or of their direction, and it leaves causation out on a limb. I'm afraid not.


The 14 ideas from 'A Future for Presentism'

How can presentists talk of 'earlier than', and distinguish past from future? [Bourne]
The redundancy theory conflates metalinguistic bivalence with object-language excluded middle [Bourne]
All relations between spatio-temporal objects are either spatio-temporal, or causal [Bourne]
It is a necessary condition for the existence of relations that both of the relata exist [Bourne]
Presentism seems to deny causation, because the cause and the effect can never coexist [Bourne]
Special Relativity allows an absolute past, future, elsewhere and simultaneity [Bourne]
No-Futurists believe in past and present, but not future, and say the world grows as facts increase [Bourne]
The idea of simultaneity in Special Relativity is full of verificationist assumptions [Bourne]
Since presentists treat the presentness of events as basic, simultaneity should be define by that means [Bourne]
Is Sufficient Reason self-refuting (no reason to accept it!), or is it a legitimate explanatory tool? [Bourne]
Relativity denies simultaneity, so it needs past, present and future (unlike Presentism) [Bourne]
Time is tensed or tenseless; the latter says all times and objects are real, and there is no passage of time [Bourne]
B-series objects relate to each other; A-series objects relate to the present [Bourne]
Time flows, past is fixed, future is open, future is feared but not past, we remember past, we plan future [Bourne]