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Single Idea 8198

[filed under theme 7. Existence / B. Change in Existence / 1. Nature of Change ]

Full Idea

The idea of 'Cambridge Change' is like saying 'the landscape changes as you travel east'.

Gist of Idea

A 'Cambridge Change' is like saying 'the landscape changes as you travel east'

Source

Michael Dummett (Truth and the Past [2001], 5)

Book Ref

Dummett,Michael: 'Truth and the Past (Dewey Lectures)' [Columbia 2004], p.87


A Reaction

The phrase was coined in Oxford. It is a useful label with which realists can insult solipsists, idealists and other riff-raff. Four Dimensionalists seem to see time in this way. Events sit there, and we travel past them. But there are indexical events.


The 11 ideas from 'Truth and the Past'

Truth-condition theorists must argue use can only be described by appeal to conditions of truth [Dummett]
The truth-conditions theory must get agreement on a conception of truth [Dummett]
Intuitionists rely on the proof of mathematical statements, not their truth [Dummett]
I no longer think what a statement about the past says is just what can justify it [Dummett]
Verification is not an individual but a collective activity [Dummett]
Undecidable statements result from quantifying over infinites, subjunctive conditionals, and the past tense [Dummett]
Surely there is no exact single grain that brings a heap into existence [Dummett]
A 'Cambridge Change' is like saying 'the landscape changes as you travel east' [Dummett]
Maybe past (which affects us) and future (which we can affect) are both real [Dummett]
The present cannot exist alone as a mere boundary; past and future truths are rendered meaningless [Dummett]
The existence of a universe without sentience or intelligence is an unintelligible fantasy [Dummett]