The Natural Philosophy of TimeClarendon Press, 1980 - 399 Seiten |
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Seite 16
... believed to have originated when the earth's atmos- phere was devoid of oxygen . Various lines of evidence indicate that the present atmosphere is not primordial but has evolved in the course of the earth's history . The primitive ...
... believed to have originated when the earth's atmos- phere was devoid of oxygen . Various lines of evidence indicate that the present atmosphere is not primordial but has evolved in the course of the earth's history . The primitive ...
Seite 27
... believed that there were indisputable argu- ments for rejecting both alternatives , and he therefore concluded that our idea of time is inapplicable to the universe itself but is merely a part of our mental apparatus for imagining or ...
... believed that there were indisputable argu- ments for rejecting both alternatives , and he therefore concluded that our idea of time is inapplicable to the universe itself but is merely a part of our mental apparatus for imagining or ...
Seite 50
... believed that time is the form of ' intuition ' appropriate to our internal sense , so that we only conceive our states of mind as being in time in introspection , but that they are not really in time . Although Kant considered that all ...
... believed that time is the form of ' intuition ' appropriate to our internal sense , so that we only conceive our states of mind as being in time in introspection , but that they are not really in time . Although Kant considered that all ...
Inhalt
UNIVERSAL TIME | 1 |
HUMAN TIME | 48 |
BIOLOGICAL TIME | 123 |
Urheberrecht | |
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according alpha rhythm animals argued argument Aristotle assigned associated atoms axiom biological clock body brain Bünning causal circadian rhythms circannual concept concerned conclusion consciousness Consequently constant continuous cosmic cycle definition depends direction distance duration E₁ effect Einstein's entropy epoch equation event horizon example existence experience fact finite formula function fundamental particle future galaxies geometry given gravitational hence hypothesis idea infinite instant interval light cones London mathematical matter measure mechanism memory Minkowski diagram Moreover motion moving nature Nevertheless Newton objects observer occur organisms origin oscillations paradox particle horizon particular past perception period phenomena philosophers photons photoperiodic physical physiological possible postulate precedes present principle problem processes regarded relation result reversal scale sense sequence simultaneous space space-time spatial specious present speed succession t₁ t₂ temperature temporal Theory of Relativity tion transl uniform universe velocity of light whereas world line world model Zeno's paradox