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Full Idea
It would appear that any denial of the existence of continuants entails a denial of change.
Gist of Idea
If things don't persist through time, then change makes no sense
Source
Robin Le Poidevin (Intro to 'Questions of Time and Tense' [1998], 1)
Book Ref
'Questions of Time and Tense', ed/tr. Le Poidevin,R [OUP 2002], p.3
A Reaction
[He cites Lowe for this view] Presumably we don't just accept change at face value, in that case. Indeed, views about temporal parts or time-worms give a different account of change (though perhaps a less convincing one).
15186 | In the tenseless view, all times are equally real, so statements of the future have truth-values [Le Poidevin] |
15187 | It is claimed that the tense view entails the unreality of both future and past [Le Poidevin] |
15188 | If things don't persist through time, then change makes no sense [Le Poidevin] |
15189 | Things which have ceased change their A-series position; things that persist change their B-series position [Le Poidevin] |
15192 | We share a common now, but not a common here [Le Poidevin] |
15191 | At the very least, minds themselves seem to be tensed [Le Poidevin] |
15190 | Evil can't be an illusion, because then the illusion that there is evil would be evil [Le Poidevin] |
15193 | The new tenseless theory offers indexical truth-conditions, instead of a reductive analysis [Le Poidevin] |
15195 | If the future is not real, we don't seem to have any obligation to future individuals [Le Poidevin] |
15196 | God being inside or outside of time both raise a group of difficult problems [Le Poidevin] |
15197 | Fiction seems to lack a tensed perspective, and offers an example of tenseless language [Le Poidevin] |