The Natural Philosophy of TimeClarendon Press, 1980 - 399 Seiten |
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Seite 67
... conscious appreciation of the fact that one event follows another is of a different kind from our awareness of either event separately . If two events are to be represented as occurring in succession , then - paradoxically - they must ...
... conscious appreciation of the fact that one event follows another is of a different kind from our awareness of either event separately . If two events are to be represented as occurring in succession , then - paradoxically - they must ...
Seite 111
... conscious recall . ‡ Memory , as we have seen , depends not only on schemata but also on coding . It is essentially related to what Suzanne Langer has called man's symbolic transformation of experience . As she has suggested , the ...
... conscious recall . ‡ Memory , as we have seen , depends not only on schemata but also on coding . It is essentially related to what Suzanne Langer has called man's symbolic transformation of experience . As she has suggested , the ...
Seite 367
... conscious appreciation of it ' ( Tyrrell 1946 , p . 96 ) . Be that as it may , genuine precognition of events , as ... conscious self . Consequently , he regards the conscious mind as struggling ' to string into a temporal sequence ...
... conscious appreciation of it ' ( Tyrrell 1946 , p . 96 ) . Be that as it may , genuine precognition of events , as ... conscious self . Consequently , he regards the conscious mind as struggling ' to string into a temporal sequence ...
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 C. D. Broad Cambridge causal circadian rhythms circannual concept concerned conclusion 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 measure mechanism memory Minkowski diagram Moreover motion moving Nevertheless Newton objects observer occur organisms origin oscillations paradox particle horizon particular past perception period phenomena philosophers photons photoperiodic Phys 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 thermodynamic tion transl uniform velocity of light whereas world line world model