Stanisław ZiemiańskiCorresponding author

Time and Its Philosophical Implications

Article
13/1 - Spring 2008, pages 69-82
Date of online publication: 15 juin 2008
Date of publication: 01 juin 2008

Abstract

The conception of time, presented by St. Augustine, unites within itself the physical-philosophical views of Aristotle, and its own psychological view concerning the lived experience of the flow of sensory impressions from the past towards the future. H. Majkrzak (1999) underlines, in Augustine, the existential moment of time. The time of a human life is limited: it is situated within borders stretching from the day of birth to the day of death. This faithful and precise representation of the Augustinian conception of time, nevertheless brings the reader up against a problem: What value does it have today?

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Cite this article

Ziemiański, Stanisław. "Time and Its Philosophical Implications.“ Forum Philosophicum 13, no. 1 (2008): 69–82. doi:10.35765/forphil.2008.1301.05.

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