
Publication details
Year: 2006
Pages: 77-96
Series: Synthese
Full citation:
, "Temporal metaphysics in z-land", Synthese 149 (1), 2006, pp. 77-96.
Abstract
John Perry has argued that language, thought and experience often contain unarticulated constituents. I argue that this idea holds the key to explaining away the intuitive appeal of the A-theory of time and the endurance theory of persistence. The A-theory has seemed intuitively appealing because the nature of temporal experience makes it natural for us to use one-place predicates like past to deal with what are really two-place relations, one of whose constituents is unarticulated. The endurance view can be treated in a similar way; the temporal boundaries of temporal parts of objects are unarticulated in experience and this makes it seem that the very same entity exists at different times.
Cited authors
Publication details
Year: 2006
Pages: 77-96
Series: Synthese
Full citation:
, "Temporal metaphysics in z-land", Synthese 149 (1), 2006, pp. 77-96.