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Full Idea
Without time it is hard to make sense of historical research, evolutionary biology, psychology, chemistry, biology, cosmology, social science, archaeology, practical reason, evidence, human agency and causation.
Gist of Idea
Most of the sciences depend on the concept of time
Source
Baron,S/Miller,K (Intro to the Philosophy of Time [2019], 1.8)
Book Ref
Baron,S/Miller,K: 'Introduction to the Philosophy of Time' [Polity 2019], p.34
A Reaction
[compressed] I do find it extraordinary that relativistic physicists cheerfully embrace an eternalist theory of time which seems to render nearly all of the other sciences meaningless.
22956 | How can time exist, when it is composed of what has ceased to be and is yet to be? [Aristotle] |
5102 | If all of time has either ceased to exist, or has not yet happened, maybe time does not exist [Aristotle] |
1904 | Time must be unlimited, but past and present can't be non-existent, and can't be now, so time does not exist [Sext.Empiricus] |
5981 | The whole of the current year is not present, so how can it exist? [Augustine] |
19381 | The past has ceased to exist, and the future does not yet exist, so time does not exist [William of Ockham] |
2107 | No time exists except instants, and instants are not even a part of time, so time does not exist [Leibniz] |
12720 | Time doesn't exist, since its parts don't coexist [Leibniz] |
22936 | A-series time positions are contradictory, and yet all events occupy all of them! [McTaggart, by Le Poidevin] |
4231 | Time involves change, only the A-series explains change, but it involves contradictions, so time is unreal [McTaggart, by Lowe] |
22900 | How can we question the passage of time, if the question takes time to ask? [Bardon] |
22995 | Most of the sciences depend on the concept of time [Baron/Miller] |