@misc{Lexicon of Arguments, title = {Quotation from: Lexicon of Arguments – Concepts - Ed. Martin Schulz, 19 Mar 2024}, author = {Wessel, H.}, subject = {Time}, note = {I 376 Time/space/logic/Wessel: The expression of time and space is no problem for relation predicates: "before", "next", etc. Problem: time and space seen as subjects, where one in turn ascribes predicates: - e.g. "space is curved" - "narrows", "time slows down", etc. >Time, >Spacetime, >Curved space. I 376 Time/introduction/Wessel: analogous to the introduction of space termini, same problems basis: experience of the human. >Introduction, >Experience, cf. >Time/Kant. I 378 Time/existence/Wessel: here they are not persistent empirical objects (material objects) but changes of objects that build temporal structures. - Here the "differing temporality" of changes is important. The changes exist at different times, but the time structure itself exists for us only when it is fixed by us. - So there is no sense to speak of the existence of a given time, but only of a space area where we observe the changes (time and space are not separated) - one can say, changes are "identically spaced". I 378/79 Structure/existence/time/space/Wessel: the question of the existence of structures is attributed to the existence of order relations a a Rb, and the latter is defined as a function of the existence of a and b. >Structures, >Relations. Changes of the spatial structure cannot be verified. >Change. I 380 Time/time structure/Wessel: to speak of "the same time structure", it must be formed of the same objects.}, note = { Wessel I H. Wessel Logik Berlin 1999 }, file = {http://philosophy-science-humanities-controversies.com/listview-details.php?id=287129} url = {http://philosophy-science-humanities-controversies.com/listview-details.php?id=287129} }