
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2001
Pages: 249-261
Series: Philosophical studies series
ISBN (Hardback): 9789048158416
Full citation:
, "Is precedence a secondary quality?", in: The importance of time, Berlin, Springer, 2001


Is precedence a secondary quality?
pp. 249-261
in: L. N. Oaklander (ed), The importance of time, Berlin, Springer, 2001Abstract
One of the challenges faced by anyone who proposes to revise our ordinary conception of time — and one who denies the reality of tense is surely proposing such a revision — is to show that the consequent revision can be reconciled with the facts about our ordinary experience of time (especially, in the case of the tenseless theory, those aspects of our experience which appear to point to real tense). One such fact is that our experience is temporally limited, in that what we experience, when we experience it, is always experienced as present. Another, related, fact is that we seem to share the same present, in that we tend to agree with each other, on the basis of our perceptions, what is going on now. Yet another fact is that we perceive precedence: we perceive, not just one thing that occurs after another thing we perceive, but that one thing occurs after another.
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2001
Pages: 249-261
Series: Philosophical studies series
ISBN (Hardback): 9789048158416
Full citation:
, "Is precedence a secondary quality?", in: The importance of time, Berlin, Springer, 2001