Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T22:36:37.189Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Presentism, Ontology and Temporal Experience

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2010

Extract

In a recent article, ‘Tensed Time and Our Differential Experience of the Past and Future,’ William Lane Craig (1999a) attempts to resuscitate A. N. Prior's (1959) ‘Thank Goodness’ argument against the B-theory by combining it with Plantinga's (1983) views about basic beliefs. In essence Craig's view is that since there is a universal experience and belief in the objectivity of tense and the reality of becoming, (that he identifies with ‘the presentist metaphysic’) ‘this belief constitutes an intrinsic defeater-defeater which overwhelms the objections brought against it.’ (1999a, 519) An intrinsic defeater-defeater is a belief that enjoys such warrant for us that it simply overwhelms the defeaters brought against it without specifically rebutting or undercutting them. Thus, Craig claims that an effete philosophical argument like McTaggart's paradox is nothing more than ‘an engaging and recalcitrant brain teaser whose conclusion nobody really takes seriously.’ (1999a, 532) It is difficult to reconcile this statement with Craig's own writings elsewhere. For Craig has vigorously argued in at least two other articles that 'hybrid A-B theorists like McCall, Schlesinger, and Smith [who give ontological status to both A-properties and B-relations] are in deep trouble’ (1998, 127) since they are all effectively refuted by McTaggart's Paradox (cf. Craig 1997). It is not Craig's inconsistency regarding the significance of McTaggart conundrum that I want to draw attention to, however. Rather I wish to raise a different issue.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy and the contributors 2002

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bergmann, Gustav 1964. ‘Generality and Existence’, in Logic and Reality. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 6484.Google Scholar
Bigelow, John 1996. ‘Presentism and Properties’, in Tomberlin, James E. (ed.), Philosophical Perspectives 10: Metaphysics, 1996. Cambridge, MA and Oxford, UK: Blackwell: 3552.Google Scholar
Broad, C. D. 1938. An Examination of McTaggart's Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Craig William, Lane 1997. ‘Is Presentness a Property?American Philosophical Quarterly 34, 2740.Google Scholar
Craig, , 1998. ‘McTaggart's Paradox and the Problem of Temporary Intrinsics’, Analysis 122–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Craig, , 1999a. ‘Tensed Time and Our Differential Experience of the Past and Future’, Southern Journal of Philosophy 37, 4, 515–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Craig, , 1999b. ‘Oaklander on McTaggart and Intrinsic Change’, Analysis 59, 4, 319–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Craig, , 2002a. ‘The Extent of the Present’, International Studies in the Philosophy of Sciences 14, 2, 165–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Craig, , 2002b. The Tensed Theory of Time—A Critical Examination. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Press.Google Scholar
Craig, , 2002c. The Tenseless Theory of Time—A Critical Examination. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Press.Google Scholar
Craig, , 2001. Time and the Metaphysics of Relativity. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cromer, R. F. 1968. The Development of Temporal Reference During Acquisition of Language. Ph.D thesis, Harvard University.Google Scholar
Grossmann, Reinhardt 1992. The Existence of the World—An Introduction to Ontology. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Hinchliff, Mark 1996. ‘The Puzzle of Change’, in Tomberlin, James E. (ed.), Philosophical Perspectives 10: Metaphysics, 1996. Cambridge, and Oxford, UK: Blackwell: 119–36.Google Scholar
Hochberg, Herbert 1969. ‘Negation and Generality,’ NOUS 3, 325–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Le Poidevin, Robin 1991. Change, Cause and Contradiction: A Defense the Tenseless Theory of Time. London: Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robin, Le Poidevin (ed.) 1998a. Questions of Time and Tense. Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Le Poidevin, Robin 1998b. ‘Review of Michael Tooley's Time, Tense and Causation’, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 49, 365–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Le Poidevin, Robin 1999a. ‘Egocentric and Objective Time’, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society. New Series 99, 1936.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Le Poidevin, Robin 1999b. ‘Can Beliefs Be Caused By Their Truth-Makers? Analysis 59, 3, 148–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Le Poidevin, Robin 2001. ‘Reply To Smith and Tooley’, in Oaklander, L. Nathan (ed.), The Importance of Time. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 285–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, David 1986. On the Plurality of Worlds. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Ludlow, Peter 1999. Semantics, Tense, and Time—An Essay in the Metaphysics of Natural Language. Cambridge: MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mellor, D. H. 1998. Real Time II. Routledge: London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nerlich, Graham 1998. ‘Time As Spacetime’, in Poidevin, Robin Le (ed.), Questions of Time and Tense. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 119–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oaklander L., Nathan and Miracchi, Silvano (1980), ‘Russell, Negative Facts, and Ontology’, Philosophy of Science, 47, 434–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oaklander L., Nathan and Miracchi, Silvano 1984. Temporal Relations and Temporal Becoming: A Defense of Russellian Theory of Time. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.Google Scholar
Nathan, Oaklander L.Miracchi, Silvano and Quentin, Smith (eds.) 1994. The New Theory of Time. New Haven, Conn.:Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Nathan, Oaklander L.Miracchi, Silvano and Quentin, Smith 1996. ‘McTaggart's Paradox and Smith's Tensed Theory of Time’, Synthese 107, 205–21.Google Scholar
Nathan, Oaklander L.Miracchi, Silvano and Quentin, Smith 1999a. ‘Review of Michael Tooley's Time, Tense and Causation’, Mind 108, 407–13.Google Scholar
Nathan, Oaklander L.Miracchi, Silvano and Quentin, Smith 1999b. ‘Craig on McTaggart's Paradox and the Problem of Temporary Intrinsics’, Analysis 59, 4, 314–18.Google Scholar
Nathan, Oaklander L.Miracchi, Silvano and Quentin, Smith(ed.) 2002. The Importance of Time. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Plantinga, Alvin 1983. ‘Reason and Belief,’ in Plantinga, Alvin and Wolterstorff, Nicholas (eds), Faith and Philosophy. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 3963.Google Scholar
Prior, Arthur 1959. ‘Thank Goodness That's Over’, Philosophy 34, 1217.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prior, Arthur 1967. Past, Present and Future. Clarendon, Oxford, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prior, Arthur 1968. Papers on Time and Tense. Clarendon, Oxford UK.Google Scholar
Prior, Arthur 1970. ‘The Notion of the Present’, Studium Generale 23, 245–48.Google Scholar
Prior, Arthur 1996. ‘Some Free Thinking About Time’, in Copeland, B. J. (ed.), Logic and Reality, Essays on the Legacy of Arthur Prior. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Russell, Bertrand 1918. The Philosophy of Logical Atomism, in Marsh, Robert Charles (ed.) (1964), Logic and Knowledge: Essays 1901–1950 London: George Allen & Unwin, 177281.Google Scholar
Smith, Quentin 1986. ‘The Infinite Regress of Temporal Attributions’, The Southern Journal of Philosophy 24, 383–96. Reprinted in L. Nathan Oaklander and Quentin Smith (eds.), The New Theory of Time (1994).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Quentin 1993. Language and Time. New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Quentin 1999a. ‘Review of Michael Tooley's Time, Tense and Causation’, The Philosophical Review 108, 123–27.Google Scholar
Smith, Quentin 1999b. ‘The ‘Sentence-Type Version’ of the Tenseless Theory of Time’, Synthese 119, 233–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Quentin 2002a. ‘Reference to the Past and Future’, in Jokic, Alexandar and Smith, Quentin (eds.), Time, Tense and Reference. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Smith, Quentin 2002b. ‘Time and Degrees of Existence: A Theory of “Degree Presentism”,’ in Callender, Craig (ed.), Time, Reality and. Experience, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 119–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tooley, Michael 1997. Time, Tense and Causation. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Zimmerman, Dean 1998. ‘Temporary Intrinsics and Presentism’, in Inwagen, Peter van and Zimmerman, Dean (eds), Metaphysics, The Big Questions. Oxford: Blackwell, 206–19.Google Scholar