ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1976. This comprehensive study discusses in detail the philosophical, mathematical, physical, logical and theological aspects of our understanding of time and space. The text examines first the many different definitions of time that have been offered, beginning with some of the puzzles arising from our awareness of the passage of time and shows how time can be understood as the concomitant of consciousness. In considering time as the dimension of change, the author obtains a transcendental derivation of the concept of space, and shows why there has to be only one dimension of time and three of space, and why Kant was not altogether misguided in believing the space of our ordinary experience to be Euclidean.

The concept of space-time is then discussed, including Lorentz transformations, and in an examination of the applications of tense logic the author discusses the traditional difficulties encountered in arguments for fatalism. In the final sections he discusses eternity and the beginning and end of the universe.

The book includes sections on the continuity of space and time, on the directedness of time, on the differences between classical mechanics and the Special and General theories of relativity, on the measurement of time, on the apparent slowing down of moving clocks, and on time and probability.

part |1 pages

I  Time by itself

chapter 1|4 pages

The nature of time

chapter 2|10 pages

Time and consciousness

chapter 3|3 pages

Instants and intervals

chapter 4|6 pages

The ever-shrinking present

chapter 5|3 pages

Concepts and experience

chapter 6|6 pages

Denseness and continuity

chapter 7|8 pages

The topology of time

chapter 8|14 pages

The direction of time

chapter 9|4 pages

Cyclic time

chapter 10|4 pages

The measurement of time

chapter 11|4 pages

Calendars and clocks

chapter 12|4 pages

The rational theory of clocks

chapter 14|7 pages

Facts and fiats

chapter 15|8 pages

The tenuousness of time

part |1 pages

II  The argument from time to space

chapter 16|4 pages

Space

chapter 17|3 pages

Outline of the argument from time to space

chapter 18|1 pages

Time, change and communication

chapter 19|3 pages

Things

chapter 21|2 pages

The argument from change to things

chapter 24|3 pages

Types and tokens

chapter 25|4 pages

The Identity of Indiscernibles

chapter 26|2 pages

Parameter space

chapter 27|5 pages

Wireless metaphysics

chapter 28|6 pages

Impenetrability

chapter 29|4 pages

Dimensions and continuity

part III|1 pages

The theology of space

chapter 30|5 pages

Newtonian space

chapter 31|5 pages

Equivalence relations and groups

chapter 32|8 pages

Digression into geometry

chapter 33|4 pages

Interpretations

chapter 34|3 pages

The measurement of space

chapter 35|7 pages

Tὸ ἄπειρον

chapter 36|7 pages

Reflections and rotations

chapter 37|3 pages

The Euclidean group

chapter 38|2 pages

Shapes and sizes

chapter 39|3 pages

Pythagoreanism

chapter 40|3 pages

Theodicy

part |1 pages

IV  Space and time together

chapter 41|4 pages

The plenum

chapter 42|7 pages

Newtonian mechanics and relativity

chapter 43|7 pages

The Lorentz group of transformations

chapter 45|3 pages

A priori arguments and empirical truths

chapter 46|8 pages

The dilatation of time

chapter 48|7 pages

Athanasius intra mundum

part |1 pages

V  Return to time

chapter 49|7 pages

Time reversibility in classical physics

chapter 50|4 pages

Time and probability

chapter 51|11 pages

Time and modality

chapter 52|9 pages

Tenses

chapter 53|10 pages

Dates and tenses

chapter 54|8 pages

Future contingents and fatalism

chapter 55|8 pages

Eternity

chapter 56|9 pages

Alpha and omega