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Full Idea
Stoics posited that time is an incorporeal which is conceived of all by itself, while Epicurus thinks that it is an accident of certain things, ...and he called in a property of properties.
Gist of Idea
Stoics say time is incorporeal and self-sufficient; Epicurus says it is a property of properties of things
Source
Epicurus (fragments/reports [c.289 BCE])
Book Ref
Epicurus: 'The Epicurus Reader', ed/tr. Inwood,B. /Gerson,L. [Hackett 1994], p.92
A Reaction
[Source Sextus 'Adversus Mathematicos' 10.219-227]
14525 | Stoics say time is incorporeal and self-sufficient; Epicurus says it is a property of properties of things [Epicurus] |
13311 | Does time exist on its own? Did anything precede it? Did it pre-exist the cosmos? [Seneca] |
22915 | Newton needs intervals of time, to define velocity and acceleration [Newton, by Le Poidevin] |
22893 | Newton thought his laws of motion needed absolute time [Newton, by Bardon] |
17012 | Time exists independently, and flows uniformly [Newton] |
14012 | Absolute time, from its own nature, flows equably, without relation to anything external [Newton] |
5536 | If space and time exist absolutely, we must assume the existence of two pointless non-entities [Kant] |
16921 | If all empirical sensation of bodies is removed, space and time are still left [Kant] |
24141 | Having a sense of time presupposes absolute time [Nietzsche] |
12689 | Simultaneity can be temporal equidistance from the Big Bang [Ellis] |
18279 | Relativity is as absolutist about space-time as Newton was about space [Coffa] |
16264 | I believe the passing of time is a fundamental fact about the world [Maudlin] |
14013 | Special Relativity allows an absolute past, future, elsewhere and simultaneity [Bourne] |