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| Content Provider | frontiers |
|---|---|
| Author | Dorato, Mauro |
| Abstract | We anticipate the future in the present by using relevant inductive information stored in our memory.I take it that 1 and 2 are sufficient to conclude that C Across time we experience three different temporal perspectives about the same physical events: anticipation, perception, and memory. Notice that these events need not be temporally close to our present experience: I can anticipate my giving a talk next month and then remember it for a long time.If this argument is correct, a few crucial questions arise:3.1 How can the same event be first anticipated in the non-immediate future, perceived, and then remembered in the past?3.2 What is the ontological status of the anticipated events? Do they exist tenselessly in a block (a) or do they come into being when they occur (b)?3.3 Is there a genuine difference between the alternatives (a) and (b)?By referring to the two target papers, I will focus on the first two questions 1 by briefly sketching three possible avenues of research: physical, ontological, and neurocognitive.One physically necessary condition for C is that events "keep on happening" one after the other along worldlines. IGUSs rely on this presupposition too: our brains register the objective temporal succession of physical events, where the objectivity is given by the invariance of proper time. GBM agree: "the experience of happening is part of our experience of the flow of time" (p. 6). In BR, Rovelli insists that spacetime is replete with processes and there... |
| ISSN | 16641078 |
| DOI | 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1110386 |
| Volume Number | 14 |
| Journal | Frontiers in Psychology |
| Language | English |
| Publisher Date | 2023-05-26 |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Subject Keyword | Anticipation Time reversal invariance Temporal perspectives Brain limitations IGUS model |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |
| Subject | Psychology |
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