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"Only a wayfarer born under unruly stars would attempt to put into practice in our epoch of proliferating knowledge the Heraclitean dictum that `men who love wisdom must be inquirers into very many things indeed.'" Thus begins this remarkable interdisciplinary study of time by a master of the subject. And while developing a theory of "time as conflict," J. T. Fraser does offer "many things indeed"--an enormous range of ideas about matter, life, death, evolution, and value.
Time. --- Absolute elsewhere. --- Acausal connectedness. --- Adaptation. --- Age of the universe. --- Antinomies of time. --- Bayes’s theorem. --- Beginnings of time. --- Biogenesis. --- Calendars. --- Chaos vs. conflict. --- Chronogenic localization. --- Clocks. --- Coital distribution. --- Connectedness, noncausal. --- Countercultures. --- Dating techniques. --- Division of labor. --- Ecology/world-views. --- Engrams. --- Eotemporal beginnings/endings. --- Epigenesis/preformation. --- Existential tension. --- Existentialism. --- Factuality. --- Final causation. --- Flight from time. --- Frankenstein syndrome. --- Gauss-Robertson program. --- General systems theory. --- Goal-seeking behavior. --- Hallucination. --- Heavenly Clockwork. --- Hebrew covenant. --- Homeostasis. --- Iconology of time. --- Incompleteness theorem. --- Intentionality. --- Jainism and time. --- Large numbers, laws of. --- Lee effect. --- Mach’s principle. --- Mathematization of science. --- Maxwell’s equations. --- Menstrual periods. --- Motion picture. --- Mystical experience. --- National socialism. --- Natural selection. --- Nomogenesis. --- Nuclear gyroscopes/ inertia. --- Olber’s paradox. --- Orphism.
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