On Pyrrho and Time

Martinon, Jean-Paul

  • 出版商: Palgrave MacMillan
  • 出版日期: 2024-09-29
  • 售價: $5,160
  • 貴賓價: 9.5$4,902
  • 語言: 英文
  • 頁數: 245
  • 裝訂: Hardcover - also called cloth, retail trade, or trade
  • ISBN: 303167619X
  • ISBN-13: 9783031676192
  • 下單後立即進貨 (約1週~2週)

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商品描述

Today's understanding of time remains mostly Aristotelian and Newtonian/Einsteinian: time is what has been abstracted from the mundane realities of life and reduced to its measurement. Any somatic, psychological, or other experience of time is deemed either irrelevant or secondary. The history of the attempts to provide alternatives to time as measurement is infinite, most of which focuses on understanding time as an inner-temporal phenomenon for which a subject temporalizes him or herself through remembrance, experience, or anticipation (including death). Amidst this vast field, one argument by an enigmatic figure in ancient Greek thought stands out for the way it abides by neither the conventional view that time is clock time nor that it is an inner temporal phenomenon: Aenesidemus' overlooked way of apprehending time by qualifying it as similar to air. To make sense of such an unusual statement, it is necessary to reconsider what informs such an unusual idea. Aenesidemus' teacher was Pyrrho (often dubbed the Greek Buddha) who advocated for a non-differential approach to reality, one for which nothing is fixed or stable. With this perspective in mind, Aenesidemus' idea then becomes clear: time or air knows no differentiae, whether that of the unit of measure or of the subject breathing it and sheltering from it. Both are radically unstable.

While these ideas had no purchase for over 2000 years, they can now be revealed in all their magnitude. In the last 120 years, we have indeed become aerial beings. We no longer scuttle around on the ground floor below an unsuspected ocean of air. We no longer aspire to shin a tree or scale a peak. We have now made a habitation of the air. Such a new dwelling has its own unique time, a time that strangely does not agree with the abstracted and/or calculated time that was formulated when we only had sundials and water-clocks at our disposal. Against time as measure and against time as inner-temporal phenomenon comes time as total instability. Can revisiting the few fragments that Pyrrho and his disciple left us help once again articulate our relation to time and give us a renewed sense of reality and who we are within it? This monograph focuses on early Pyrrhonism (as distinguished from the sceptical work of Sextus Empiricus), Pali Buddhism, as well as contemporary interpretations of time and reality in both science and philosophy.

商品描述(中文翻譯)

今天對時間的理解仍然主要是亞里士多德和牛頓/愛因斯坦的觀點:時間是從日常生活的平凡現實中抽象出來並簡化為其測量的東西。任何身體的、心理的或其他對時間的體驗都被視為不相關或次要的。關於提供時間作為測量的替代方案的歷史是無窮無盡的,其中大多數集中於理解時間作為一種內在的時間現象,主體通過回憶、經驗或預期(包括死亡)來使自己時間化。在這個廣闊的領域中,古希臘思想中一位神秘人物的論點因其不遵循時間是鐘表時間或內在時間現象的傳統觀點而脫穎而出:阿尼西德穆斯(Aenesidemus)被忽視的理解時間的方式,將其比擬為空氣。要理解這樣一個不尋常的陳述,有必要重新考慮這樣一個不尋常的想法的根源。阿尼西德穆斯的老師是皮羅(Pyrrho,常被稱為希臘佛陀),他主張對現實採取非差異化的方式,對於這種方式,沒有任何東西是固定或穩定的。考慮到這一觀點,阿尼西德穆斯的想法變得清晰:時間或空氣不知不同,無論是測量的單位還是呼吸它並躲避它的主體。兩者都是根本不穩定的。

雖然這些觀點在2000多年來並未受到重視,但現在可以揭示其所有的深度。在過去的120年中,我們確實已經成為空氣中的存在。我們不再在未被懷疑的空氣海洋下的地面上匆忙行走。我們不再渴望攀爬樹木或登上高峰。我們現在已經在空氣中建立了居所。這樣一個新的居所有其獨特的時間,這種時間奇怪地與我們僅有日晷和水鐘時所制定的抽象和/或計算的時間不一致。對於作為測量的時間和作為內在時間現象的時間,出現了作為完全不穩定的時間。重新審視皮羅及其弟子留下的幾個片段,是否能再次幫助我們闡明與時間的關係,並賦予我們對現實及我們在其中的身份的全新感知?這篇專論專注於早期的皮羅學派(與塞克斯圖斯·恩皮里庫斯的懷疑主義工作區分開來)、巴利佛教,以及當代對時間和現實在科學和哲學中的詮釋。

作者簡介

Jean-Paul Martinon is Reader in the Department of Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths College, University of London.

作者簡介(中文翻譯)

Jean-Paul Martinon 是倫敦大學金史密斯學院視覺文化系的講師。