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Introduction: Time and the fallacy of misplaced concreteness

In Physics and the Ultimate Significance of Time: Bohm, Prigogine, and Process Philosophy. State University of New York Press (1986)

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  1. God and Time: Essays on the Divine Nature.Gregory E. Ganssle & David M. Woodruff (eds.) - 2001 - New York, US: Oxford University Press.
    This collection highlights such issues as how the nature of time is relevant to the question of whether God is temporal and how God's other attributes are ...
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  • Divine-cosmic interaction : some contemporary alternatives.Herb Gruning - unknown
    This analysis examines the theme of divine activity as found in the literature of religion and science over the past quarter century. After a brief historical chapter, reflections on divine action from authors in the philosophy of religion are considered. In chapters 2 and 3, concepts such as intervention, deism, master act and subacts, primary and secondary causation, double agency and the causal joint are outlined. Following this, chapters 4 and 5 concentrate on the work of Whitehead. The amount of (...)
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  • Towards a View of Time as Depth.Alexander J. Argyros - 1990 - Diogenes 38 (151):29-50.
    One of the more recalcitrant issues in the philosophy of time concerns the question of temporal asymmetry. Some theorists, many of them, like Einstein, physicists, believe that time is fundamentally reversible. According to this view, the physical universe is indifferent to the direction of time; consequently, something like an arrow of time is held to be a human subjective imposition on an otherwise temporally isotropic world. Another position, held by Alfred North Whitehead and contemporary process philosophers, maintains that temporal asymmetry (...)
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  • Our cosmos, from substance to process.Timothy E. Eastman - 2008 - World Futures 64 (2):84 – 93.
    Philosophies of nature over the past three centuries have gone through three distinct phases, beginning with classical views and now evolving into a process view at the dawn of the 21st century. These phases derive from a complex weaving of two frameworks of physics since Newton's time [classical, modern] with two principal metaphysical frameworks[substance, event]. Problematic fin de sicle claims at the end of both the 19th and 20th centuries appear to have a common root in substance metaphysics and part/whole (...)
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