The Moving Image: Immutability, Metaphors, and the Time Clocks TellThrough a discussion of habit, myth, metaphor, and logic, the first section of this work is a criticism of method and the presuppositions underlying meaning. The author then presents a phenomenological meditation on clocks as metaphors of time, arguing that trees, hourglasses, mechanical clocks, and digital watches are particular metaphors of time and that they reveal beliefs about the meaning of time. Contents: include: Knowing What One Has Heard; Knowing The Time; and Digital Time as Myth. |
Contents
KNOWING WHAT ONE HAS HEARD | 1 |
The Habits of Understanding | 9 |
The Habits of Myth | 16 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absolute abstract ambiguity Andrey Sinyavsky Andrić appear articulate autonomy belief Caligula causal clocktime clockwatcher cognitive coherent conception concrete consciousness context continuity criticism cultural depends digital watch discursive duration empiricism entails Ernst Cassirer eternity everything is permitted exacerbates existence experience explanation Faber fiction flux Foustka function future G. E. M. Anscombe George Steiner habit hence hermeneutics hourglass human Ibid idea illusion immutability implications inevitably interpretation intuition Ivo Andrić kind language live logic manipulative Max Frisch meaning mentality merely metaphor method modern moments myth of digital naive realism nature Nietzsche notions objective one's paradox past perception perpetual Philosophy Plato possibility potential predicated present Princeton ramifications rational reality relationship sense sequence significant spatial specific story structure succession teleologic tell temporal theory things tion Tractatus Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus tradition trans Translated truth understanding University Press Walter Kaufmann Walter Ong Western thought Wittgenstein word York