Presentism, eternalism, and phenomenal change
pp. 275-290
Abstract
Normally, when we notice a change taking place, our conscious experience has a corresponding quality of phenomenal change. Here it is argued that one’s experience can have this quality at or during a time when there is no change in which phenomenal properties one instantiates. This undermines a number of otherwise forceful arguments against leading metaphysical theories of change, but also requires these theories to construe change as a secondary quality, akin to color.
Publication details
Published in:
Moffett Marc (2010) Selected papers from the 36th annual meeting of the society for exact philosophy. Synthese 176 (2).
Pages: 275-290
DOI: 10.1007/s11229-009-9493-0
Full citation:
Pelczar Michael (2010) „Presentism, eternalism, and phenomenal change“. Synthese 176 (2), 275–290.