
Contents
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12.1 Central Features of the Present Approach to the Nature of Time 12.1 Central Features of the Present Approach to the Nature of Time
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12.2 Some Advantages of This Approach 12.2 Some Advantages of This Approach
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12.3 A Third Way? 12.3 A Third Way?
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12 Summary and Conclusions
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Published:September 2000
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Abstract
Gives a brief summary of the results reached in the book and their advantages. It recapitulates the differences between the dynamic view of the world defended in the book and traditional tensed conceptions of time. While the latter hold that tensed facts are fundamental, the former holds that tensed facts reduce to tenseless facts even in a dynamic world, where what tenseless facts there are depends on what time it is. The different roles of causation for the present approach are summed up: Causation defines the direction of time, and can be used to analyse temporal relations; There can be causation only in a world where the past and the present are real, while the future is not.
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