ABSTRACT

Time - relentless, ever-present but intangible and the single element over which human beings have no absolute control - has long proved a puzzle. The author examines the phenomenon of time and asks such fascinating questions as how time impinges on people, to what extent our awareness of time is culturally conditioned, how societies deal with temporal problems and whether time can be considered a `resource' to be economized. More specifically, he provides a consistent and detailed analysis of theories put forward by a number of thinkers such as Durkheim, Evans-Pritchard, Lévi-Strauss, Geertz, Piaget, Husserl and Bourdieu. His discussion encompasses four main approaches in time research, namely developmental psychology, symbolic anthropology (covering the bulk of post-Durkheimian social anthropology) `economic' theories of time in social geography and, finally, phenomenological theories. The author concludes by presenting his own model of social/cognitive time, in the light of these critical discussions of the literature.

part I|145 pages

Differences in the Cognition of Time Attributed to Society and Culture

chapter Chapter 1|12 pages

Durkheim

chapter Chapter 2|8 pages

Evans-Pritchard

chapter Chapter 3|7 pages

Lévi-Strauss

chapter Chapter 4|7 pages

Leach

chapter Chapter 5|17 pages

Time-reversal in Umeda Ritual

chapter Chapter 6|7 pages

Cultural Relativism

chapter Chapter 7|8 pages

Transcendental Temporal Cultural Relativism

chapter Chapter 8|9 pages

Bali: the ‘Motionless Present’

chapter Chapter 9|6 pages

Anti-Durkheimian Anti-relativism

chapter Chapter 10|9 pages

Contrasted Regimes

chapter Chapter 12|7 pages

Piagetian Developmental Psychology

chapter Chapter 13|14 pages

Critique of the Piagetian Approach to Time Cognition

chapter Chapter 15|14 pages

The Development of Time-talk

part II|114 pages

Time-maps and Cognition

chapter Chapter 16|7 pages

Time in Philosophy: the A-series vs. the B-series

chapter Chapter 17|10 pages

The B-series

chapter Chapter 18|9 pages

The A-series

chapter Chapter 19|15 pages

B-theory Economics vs. A-theory Economics

chapter Chapter 20|16 pages

Chrono-geography

chapter Chapter 21|11 pages

The Economics of Temporal Opportunity Costs

chapter Chapter 23|8 pages

Husserl’s Model of Internal Time-consciousness

chapter Chapter 24|13 pages

The Temporal-perceptual Cycle

chapter Chapter 25|19 pages

The Modalization and Counterfactuality of Time-maps

part III|68 pages

Time and Practice

chapter Chapter 26|12 pages

The Natural Attitude and the Theory of Practice

chapter Chapter 27|11 pages

The Theory of Practice and the Timing of Exchanges

chapter Chapter 29|12 pages

Calendars and Consensual Co-ordination

chapter Chapter 30|8 pages

Calendars and Power

chapter Chapter 31|15 pages

Conclusions