ABSTRACT

By nature, philosophers seem to be divided up into two instinctual kinds: one kind tries to figure everything out; the other kind tries to explain why it is not possible to figure everything out. The basic postulate is that there is a complementary relationship between what can be known to be true in terms of the discoveries made within phenomenological epistemology and the nature of the universe itself. Time only exists in the expansion of space, and space itself can exist only in time. There appears to be a wondrous parallel between the space and the time of the physicist and the space and time of the phenomenologist. Instead of the pure imposition of a theoretical structure on the world, the fundamental, irreducible dipolar character of the world is found originally in phenomenological space-time and then and only then also posited as possessing a possible application to physical space-time.