Philosophy of Time: A view from the Past

17-18 May 2018, University of Milan, Sala Crociera Alta di Giurisprudenza

Via Festa del Perdono 7, Milan

Philosophy of time is a particularly lively area of contemporary philosophy with a great deal of interdisciplinary interaction. Several aspects and issues connected to this topic and the related theories have been systematically explored and intensely debated, in a considerable and still increasing amount of literature. Many of these issues and problems have emerged in the course of history, though often in contexts that were very different from the ones in which we find them today. Although general historical overviews can be found in many contemporary overviews of philosophy of time, the relevance of historical considerations for many contemporary debates has been often overlooked. The authors and philosophical movements on which the invited speaker will focus range from antiquity to the beginning of twentieth century, where the framework and agenda of contemporary philosophy of time started to be worked out.

                                              

Speakers:

Jean-Pascal Anfray (ENS, Paris, France)

Richard Arthur (McMaster University, Ontario, Canada)

Adrian Bardon (Wake Forest, USA)

Mauro Dorato (Roma III, Italy)

Geoffrey Gorham (Macalaster College, St. Paul’s, Minnesota, USA)

Carla Rita Palmerino (Nijmegen, The Netherlands)

Federico Perelda (Ca’ Foscari, Venezia, Italy)

Pasquale Porro (Paris Sorbonne, France and Bari, Italy)

Matthias Schemmel (Max Planck Berlin, Germany)

Emily Thomas (Durham, UK)

Chair: Giuseppe Spolaore (Padova)

Programme:

MAY 17

14:00 – 15:00
Richard Arthur (McMaster University, Ontario, Canada)
Neither “A” nor “B”: Anatomy of an ancient amphiboly concerning Time

15:10 – 16:10
Emily Thomas (Durham, UK)
The Emergence of the Growing-Block Theory of Time

16:10 – 16:40 Coffee Break

16:40-17:40

Geoffrey Gorham (Macalaster College, St. Paul’s, Minnesota, USA)
Varieties of Presentism in the Seventeenth Century: Descartes, Hobbes and Locke

17:50-18:50
Matthias Schemmel (Max Planck Berlin, Germany)
The concepts of duration and non-duration in the ancient Chinese ‘Mohist Canon’: Cognitive universals and cultural specifics

20:00 Dinner

MAY 18

09:30-10:30
Stefano Di Bella (Milan)
Permanent and Successive Duration: Between Scholasticism and Cartesianism

10:40-11:40
Carla Rita Palmerino (Nijmegen, The Netherlands)
Early modern discussions on the composition of space, time and matter

11:50-12:50
Jean-Pascal Anfray (ENS, Paris)
Are Monads temporal? Leibniz and the reality of monadic duration

12:50 – 14:30 Lunch

14:30 – 15:30
Adrian Bardon (Wake Forest, USA)
David Hume and the Successive Perception of Succession

15:40 -16:40
Federico Perelda (Ca’ Foscari, Venezia, Italy)
Hegel and contemporary philosophy of time

16:50-17.40
Mauro Dorato (Roma III, Italy)
Schopenhauer’s two notions of the present

Abstracts:

Richard Arthur

Neither ‘A’ nor ‘B’: Anatomy of an ancient amphiboly concerning time

In this paper I treat some issues pertaining to the rival claims of the so-called “A-“ and “B-theories” of time, as discussed in the first chapters of my forthcoming book, The Reality of Time Flow: local becoming in modern physics.
I contend that this opposition is not well posed. I will argue for this by delving into some of the antecedents of McTaggart’s famous argument to be found in Aristotle’s discussion. I endorse the latter’s linkage of the reality of passage to the reality of motion, and use it to show the shortcomings of Russell’s (1903) solution to Zeno’s Arrow Paradox.  I then analyze McTaggart’s arguments, and show how both his and Russell’s treatments are vitiated by their dependence on a tacit (idealistic) premise about the pre-existence of “positions in time” that they share with Hegel.

Adrian Bardon

David Hume and the Successive Perception of Succession:

Empiricists have a time problem. If the past and future are not directly perceived, then neither is temporal succession. Awareness of any current state as a complex state—the parts of which represent temporally distinct experiences—depends on a grasp of temporal order/succession. So our grasp of temporal succession, it seems, cannot originate either in a simple impression of the senses or in simple reflection on experience. One approach to dealing with this issue is extensionalism, which states that our acts of awareness are themselves temporally extended, and so may include temporal succession as part of their content. Hume’s version of extensionalism has received very little attention; I shall take a look at its distinctive features, along with problems and prospects for his account of time consciousness.

Matthias Schemmel

The concepts of duration and non-duration in the ancient Chinese ‘Mohist Canon’: Cognitive universals and cultural specifics

The dialectical chapters of the Later Mohist corpus from Warring States China (ca. 300 BCE) are a rare source documenting theoretical reflections on time, space, matter, and mechanical and optical phenomena, because, in contrast to most other sources of this kind, they originated completely independently from similar traditions in ancient Greece. They are therefore well-suited, by way of comparison, to address questions of necessity and contingency in the development of theoretical reflections on fundamental concepts. In my contribution I will present some of the Mohist definitions and propositions that center around the concept of duration and its theoretical derivative of ‘non-duration’ and discuss the origin of the knowledge they represent.

Organisers:

Richard Arthur, Stefano Di Bella, Giuliano Torrengo

Sponsors: The Department of Philosophy, and the project TIME-METHODS

More info will be available soon.

17-18 May – “Philosophy of Time: A view from the Past”

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