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<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font color="#ff0000"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>S<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdfSSM_up" align="right" hspace="5" width="190" height="41" border="0">patiomaterialism.</b></font></font>
Given these three assumptions of ontological philosophy, the final
step in securing its foundation for necessary truths is to use them
to decide what to believe about the basic nature of existence. As it
turns out, the empirical method is decisive. There is one ontology
that we must choose over the others, if we follow the empirical
method, and it is different from the currently accepted ontologies.
The two received views are both ontologies of science. They come from
realism about contemporary physics. One is materialism, the view that
matter is the only kind of substance constituting the world, whereas
the other maintains that an opposite kind of basic substance helps
matter constitute the world, namely, spacetime. But as we shall see,
naturalists who take ontology to be explanatory and follow the
empirical method in deciding what to believe ought to reject both in
favor of the view that the world is constituted by space and matter,
both existing as substances in time, or what I will call
&quot;spatiomaterialism.&quot; </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">We
can see that spatiomaterialism is the best ontological explanation of
the natural world by considering the various possible theories on
each of the basic issues about what exists in the natural world:
time, space, and matter. In each case we will decide what to believe
by which theory offers the best ontological explanation of what is
found in the natural world -- the one that explains the most with the
least. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Our
conclusion will be, however, that we ought to accept these
ontological position <i>if they are otherwise possible.</i> There are
ways they may be falsified by certain unobvious phenomena which we
are not currently taking into account. I mean the observations used
as evidence for Einsteinian relativity, as well as the fact of
consciousness, the real difference between good and bad, and the
validity of the belief that there is something worthy of worship. We
will not be in a position to show how those phenomena can also be
explained until we take up the necessary truths of ontological
philosophy. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font color="#800000"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>T<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdfSTime_up" align="right" hspace="5" width="75" height="29" border="0">ime.</b></font></font>
We have already assumed that the world is in time by assuming that
substance as substance has a temporal aspect to its nature, but as we
have also seen, there is a further issue to be decided. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>P<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdfSTPosEx_up" align="right" hspace="5" width="89" height="49" border="0">ossible
explanations.</b></font> We know from our experience of the world
that objects are in time as well as in space, but as we saw in
<font color="#0000ff"><u><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/Lo/L/LoOtdO09.htm" target="Lo"><font face="Arial, sans-serif">Ontology:
Temporality </font></a></u></font>, there are two possible theories
about the nature of time. We are looking for an explanation of the
world by substances, but we can believe either that </font></font></font><img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdfSEndure_up" align="left" hspace="10" width="25" height="146" border="0">
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">substances
endure or that they perdure over time. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>Endurance
theory of time.</b></i> To hold that substances endure through time
is to hold that they exist only at the present moment. Existence
itself is in time. The past and the future do not exist. This view is
sometimes called &quot;presentism,&quot; but we are also assuming
that what exists are substances. Thus, since substances never come
into existence nor ever go out of existence as time passes, the
substances that exist now did exist in the past and will exist in the
future. In other words, substances are identical across time. Each
substance that exists at one moment is identical to some substance
that existed or will exist at every other moment in the history of
the world.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>P<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdfSPerdure_up" align="right" hspace="5" width="26" height="148" border="0">erdurance
theory of time.</b></i> To hold that substances perdure over time is
to hold that all the moments of their histories exist in the same
way. Time is just a relation that holds among those moments. The past
and the future exist in the same sense as the present, for &quot;past
and &quot;future&quot; are just ways of referring to other moments
relative to some moment <i>taken as </i>present. Though the
perdurance theory of the temporal existential nature of substances
can agree that substances never come into existence nor go out of
existence over time, what they mean is that substances are wholes
made up of parts, with each substance having a momentary part for
each moment in the history of the world. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>T<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAFkAAAAxCAMAAACGcvWqAAAAYFBMVEX////38PDv4ODt3Lzo2Ljn0NDdza/fwMDMvaHXsLDBs5nMmZm1qJDHkJC/gICYjXm3cHCBeGavYGBwaFmmUFCeQEBlXlBfWEuZMzOOICCGEBB+AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABLztMAAAB9klEQVR4nO2U7VbDIAyGAcVYsbEiTCC7/+s0YW33caqbrhw9nuVHIU36NE3Dq+4us6ftdnth6mjqTrWxeyZTC1MPzciPzcjPzcgvzcivzchvzcibZuT3/0fOkS23IKMGAA0LAbyWLNBivFxjqrdSLHyFVchkB6JegTWJsrGgkECphQ/5FtkgIthC3nClg+EbRNGtUbOQnYkEwBtUMWrbh7JaN7weyZgpD53WaUWydIGSKwO3nCyu1I1eeyrW8OooKIdOZ+qsv44cpQVDHbeAKGse0HOfy7mB/o+6Qelr0ajn8WfkL2ZAOg3pEnKMR6FSNa6S4ygZk3Ts/Pmlaax8Cp+QvbbA0+VV4glzBJ0BvTvFNcJzXW8BTX6VDhUpGQOq34dPyZmJlFSmXhcrGJ7ZYgYh87mgwghg6UicNvu88mKYmrmmKXxKrkeCL8K0ogucTz3Ux1NAN5IEdeizkKiyz6zhRTJyYFDd1ESs+WA69AfkQ1/INGcukiM3gopL3GjPn8YKRFWXAWtRaU8+8lUski0t+YxMTvdobEnjX+SfUXUZsPDOGRWmR2dfpINJnpXE1MxPyJQQA/dCKvBSa8C6jVREKXyQLX92nn2RDnZFScIus4YX5vnIzqrkOfsF8tV2I9/IN/IfILcxJt8/PD6/vL5t3te1zQdDqIGzL5Z/3gAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==" name="OdfSTBest_up" align="right" hspace="5" width="89" height="49" border="0">he
best ontological explanation of time.</b></font> Between these two
theories, the empirical method requires us to prefer the one that
explains more with less, that is, the one that uses fewer and simpler
ontological causes to explain more phenomena as effects. According to
each criterion, the endurance theory is clearly superior. Consider,
first, simplicity.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>Simplicity.</b></i><b>
</b>The perdurance theory must postulate many more substances as
ontological causes than the endurance theory, because it holds that
every moment in the history of each permanent substance has a
distinct and equal existence. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">In
fact, each moment is like a substance, according to the perdurance
theory, for it is a distinct ontological cause that must be
postulated separately in order to explain the world ontologically.
But if such moments are substances, they are rather unusual
substances, because they lack the temporal aspect of the existential
aspect of the nature of substance as substance. (Though they are as
eternal as the world, they do not exist at every moment in the
history of the world, for they are only one moment in the history of
a permanent substance.) Still, they have particularity. Each moment
is a particular substance with an existence that is distinct from
every other substance (including all the other moments in the history
of the same permanent substance). Thus, each has both an existential
and essential aspect to its nature (its essential nature being
whatever properties hold of the permanent substance at the relevant
moment in its history). So let us grant that they are substances of a
kind. I will call them &quot;momentary substances,&quot; since they
do not endure through time but exist non-temporally (if not
eternally) as one moment in the history of a permanent substance. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Since
every momentary substance must be postulated separately, the
perdurance theory requires many more ontological causes to explain
each permanent substance postulated by the ontology. Indeed, the
perdurance theory must postulate (indenumerably) infinitely many
momentary substances for each permanent substance, since time is
continuous (as evident in its infinite divisibility), and may well be
eternal (that is, infinite in extent). Judging simplicity by the
number of ontological causes required, therefore, the empirical
method requires us to prefer the endurance theory. The endurance
theory needs to postulate only one enduring substance to account for
each permanent substance in the world. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
may seem, however, that there is a defense for the simplicity of the
perdurance theory. Though its &quot;momentary substances&quot; are
greater in number, each is simpler in its nature than enduring
substances, and thus, its ontological causes are simpler. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">What
makes momentary substances seem simpler than enduring substances is
that momentary substances do not have to endure through time, but can
simply exist eternally as one moment in the history of a permanent
substance. But why is that simpler? </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Perhaps,
the simplicity comes from having a temporally simpler nature.
Momentary substances cannot have temporally complex properties,
because they are what exists at only one moment in the history of a
substance that never comes into existence nor goes out of existence.
But that does necessarily make them simpler than enduring substances,
for enduring substances can also have essential properties that exist
completely at each moment of the existence of the substance. On both
views, therefore, the essential properties of substances can exist
completely at each moment of the existence of the substance. Thus,
the only difference between them is that enduring substances exist at
many more moments than momentary substances. But that is just the
difference between them. To take that as showing the greater
simplicity of the perdurance theory would be to beg the question. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">On the
other hand, perhaps the greater simplicity is supposed to come from
its theory about the nature of existence. The endurance theory holds
that existence itself is in time, and since that means time is an
aspect of existence, a permanent substance must endure through time
in order to exist as a substance. Thus, it might be argued that the
perdurance theory is simpler, because it takes existence to be just
the self-subsistence of the momentary substances making up the
histories of permanent substances. Existence is non-temporal, rather
than being in time. And this greater simplicity about the perdurance
theory enables it to explain ontologically why permanent substances
exist at every moment in the history of the world: each permanent
substance is a whole made up of many momentary substances as its
parts. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">However,
that supposed ontological explanation brings out the cost of not
assuming that existence is in time. Not only must the perdurance
theory postulate infinitely many momentary substances to account for
each permanent substance, but it must also assume a basic
relationship that gives those momentary substances infinitely many
relations to one another. The events in the history of a permanent
substance occur in a certain order, and so the momentary substances
that must be related in a certain way in order to constitute it.
Though those relations may be simply how the momentary substances
exist together as a world, they must all be assumed in order to deny
presentism. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Thus, not
only are momentary substances not simpler than enduring substances in
virtue of having temporally simple essential natures, but the
perdurance theory must also postulate infinitely many momentary
substances with infinitely many relations among them to account for
each permanent substances.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">As
far as simplicity is concerned, therefore, endurance theory is
clearly superior. It postulates one enduring substance to account for
each permanent substance, whereas the perdurance theory must
postulate infinitely many momentary substances with infinitely many
relations among them in order to explain each permanent substance.
But this ontological extravagance might be justified, if the
perdurance theory can explain why permanent substances are in time,
and so let us turn to the criterion of greater scope.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>Scope.</b></i><b>
</b>The criterion of greater scope requires us to prefer the theory
about the nature of time that explains more to the one that explains
less. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
may seem that the perdurance theory does have a greater scope,
because it explains at least one phenomenon ontologically that the
endurance theory simply assumes. It explains ontologically why
permanent substances are in time by showing how they are constituted
by momentary substances and relations among them. But this claim to
have an ontological explanation of substances being in time does not
stand up, for two reasons.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">First,
it is <i>ad hoc.</i> Nothing is explained by the assumption that
permanent substances are constituted by momentary substances and
relations among them except their being substances that exist at
every moment in the history of the world. To postulate infinitely
many ontological causes to explain a single aspect of the world is to
explain the least with the most, the opposite of the empirical
criterion. To be sure, the endurance theory does not explain this
aspect any better. But there is nothing to prefer over the assumption
that existence itself is in time. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Second,
there is an aspect of this phenomenon whose possibility the
perdurance cannot explain. That aspect is how the present moment is
different from all the other moments in the history of the world,
both past and future. It is something for which the endurance theory
can account. And the failure even to account for it (that is, the
failure to explain its possibility) means that the perdurance theory
is falsified by it. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Endurance
theory can account for the fact that one moment in the history of the
world stands out as different from all the others, because it holds
that only the present moment exists. The present is different from
the past and the future in the most basic way, as far as ontology is
concerned, because the present exists, while the past and future do
not. That is what it means to hold that existence itself is in time.
(This is not to explain the phenomenon of the present ontologically,
because it is simply what the endurance theory assumes about the
nature of existence. But the endurance theory does not have to deny
that present is different from the past and future.)</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
perdurance theory, on the other hand, cannot even account for the
fact that the present stands out as different from all the other
moments in the history of the world. It holds that all the moments in
the history of a permanent substance exist in exactly the same sense,
and so there is nothing ontological that can distinguish any one
moment from all the rest that help make up its history. To be sure,
the perdurance theory can say how any moment in the history of a
permanent substance that is taken as the present differs from those
that occur earlier and those that occur latter, for its momentary
substances are all related to one another in a certain order. But it
has no way to single out any moment in the history of a permanent
substance as &quot;now.&quot; </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This
blindness to the present is implicit in what the perdurance theory
says about the nature of existence and time. Instead of taking time
to be an aspect of the nature of existence, it takes time to be part
of the structure of what exists, that is, a certain kind of
relationship that exists among its momentary substances. It sees time
as a dimension of what exists, much like spatial dimensions, and
thus, time contains different moments in the same way that space
contains different point, which means that all moment are contained
in the <i>same </i>way. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Thus, far
from explaining why permanent substances are in time, the perdurance
theory cannot even explain the possibility of the most basic aspect
of it. Indeed, the phenomenon of the present being different from the
past and future would seem to show that the perdurance theory is
false. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">What
the perdurance theorists can do, however, is <i>explain away </i>the
phenomenon. That is, it can explain why we experience the present as
being different from all the other moments by holding that it is just
an appearance that holds for each and every moment in the history of
beings like us. We are rational beings, capable of reflection, and it
is by reflecting on our experience that we come to believe that the
present moment is different from the past and the future. But if the
perdurance theory is correct, each of us is just a set of momentary
substances that makes up a personal history. Thus, it is possible to
hold that the essential nature of every momentary substance
constituting a being like us includes the appearance that that moment
in one's history is the present and, thereby, different from all the
moments in the past that may be remembered and all the moments that
may be anticipated. That is, each moment in the life of a reflective
subject includes the subjective appearance that it is present, even
though it is just another momentary substance that exists
non-temporally. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">But
this is not to explain the present. It is to claim that our sense of
the present is an illusion. That is surely an alternative that we
want to avoid, if possible, for it is <i>ad hoc</i>. Anything found
in the world could be explained away the same way, that is, explained
as a mere appearance to the subject by holding that it is actually
part of his essential nature as a substance. If it is <i>possible </i>to
explain our sense of the present being different from the past and
the future in a way that makes it true, we must prefer the theory
that does so. Hence, the empirical method requires us to prefer the
endurance theory on the grounds that it explains more than the
perdurance theory.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote1anc" href="#sdendnote1sym"><sup>i</sup></a>[1]</sup>
</font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
point can be seen more clearly if we consider how the present being
different from the past and the future is something found in the
world by perception, not just by reflection on how it seems to us. We
perceive change in the natural world, and if we articulate the
beliefs implicit in such perceptions, we find that <i>what </i>we
believe is that certain properties go out of existence and other
properties come into existence as time passes. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Consider,
for example, a bus passing by us on the street. The property of
approaching us goes out of existence as the property of being in
front of us comes into existence, and then the property of being in
front of us goes out of existence as the property of moving away from
us comes into existence. That is how we perceive change in the
natural world, and it implies that the properties that the bus had in
the past do not exist any longer, and that the properties that it
will have in the future do not exist yet. That is what we mean by
their coming into existence and going out of existence as time
passes. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">To be more
precise, reflecting on our observation, we find that the experience
involves past, present and future. At the moment we see the bus is in
front of us, we remember seeing it approach and anticipate its moving
away. Were the immediate past and future not part of our experience,
we could not observe that the bus is moving. But while the present is
seen as <i>existing</i>, the past and future are seen as <i>not
existing</i>, albeit for opposite reasons. The past event is seen as
not existing because it is over, while the future event is seen as
not existing because it has yet to happen. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">That only
the present exists may be only implicit in the observation. But that
does not mean that it is not part of <i>what </i>we observe, only
that we have not formulated that aspect as a sentence. The belief
that the buss past and future do not exist now is as much part of
the observation of the buss motion as the belief that that the bus
is a distinct object in space is a part of the observation of the bus
itself. It is not surprising, therefore, that this is called the
ordinary view of the nature of time. It is what the “man in the
street” would say about the past and future if asked about their
existence (see, for example, <font color="#0000ff"><u><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Putnam67">Putnam
</a></u></font>[1967], p. 240).</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
perception of change as &quot;real&quot; in this sense discloses
something about the world that cannot be explained by the perdurance
theory, because it must deny that any properties come into existence
or go out of existence over time. The perdurance theory holds that
every moment in the history of every substance exists in exactly the
same sense, and so the properties that hold at earlier moments still
exist in the same sense as the present, and the properties that hold
at latter moments already exist in that sense. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Again, the
only way that the perdurance theory can account for this perceived
fact about the world is to deny that it is a fact and to hold that
what we think is perception of an independently existing world is
just an illusion. That is, its defenders can hold that each of the
momentary substances making up the histories of beings like us
involves, as part of its essential nature, the appearance that change
really takes place as time passes. That would mean that, relative to
any given moment, we perceive the past and future states of the world
as not existing, even though, in fact, they do. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">But this
is, once again, to <i>explain away </i>the phenomenon, not to explain
it ontologically. It could be used to explain anything found in the
world, and thus, it should only be invoked, if it is not possible to
explain phenomena as what really exists. The perdurance theory has no
alternative, because if change is real in this sense, it is false.
But <i>we </i>have an alternative, because the perception can be
accounted for by the endurance theory. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
perdurance theory does not, therefore, have greater scope than the
endurance theory. Its explanation is <i>ad hoc</i>, and what is
worse, it is falsified by the phenomenon that it claims it alone can
explain, unless we accept further <i>ad hoc</i> assumptions that make
the phenomenon illusory. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Nor do any
of the arguments for the perdurance theory offered by defenders of
the so-called tenseless theory of time give us any reason to accept
it.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote2anc" href="#sdendnote2sym"><sup>ii</sup></a>[2]</sup>
</font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
empirical method requires us, therefore, to prefer the endurance
theory over the perdurance theory. It is simpler in both relevant
ways (the fewest and simplest ontological causes), and it has a
larger scope (in the sense that it can, at least, account for our
sense of the present and our perception of change as really occurring
in time). It clearly explains more with less. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Nor
are the basic aspects of the world that only the endurance theory can
explain trivial. The ability to explain change by the endurance of
substances through time is the foundation for explaining regularities
about change ontologically. If ontological philosophy had to accept
the perdurance theory, it would not be able to show the ontological
necessity of the connection between cause and effect in efficient
cause explanations. Nor would it be able to demonstrate the
ontological necessity of global regularities, on which most of the
new ontologically necessary truths depend. Without the endurance
theory, ontological philosophy would not be a new way of doing
philosophy. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; text-indent: 0cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
does not necessarily mean that it is true. It is only to say that we
must prefer it, <i>if it is possible</i>, for it may turn out that
there are other things found in the world contradict the endurance
theory. That is what contemporary Einsteinian believe, as we shall
see when we take up spatiotemporalism, and thus, they will have to be
answered before we can be confident about the truth of the endurance
theory.&nbsp;</font></font></font></p>
<div id="sdendnote1">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western" style="margin-top: 0cm"><a name="Weyl"></a>
<a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote1sym" href="#sdendnote1anc">i</a><sup>[1]</sup>
It may seem that there is a way to for the perdurance theory to
explain the present without dismissing the phenomenon of the present
as an illusion, and it is relevant to mention it here, because it
was first suggested by <font color="#0000ff"><u><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Weyl">Hermann
Weyl </a></u></font>([1921]<i>, </i>p. 217) in defense of the
perdurance theory entailed by taking spacetime to be a substance.
Einsteinian relativity had led, as we shall see in the next section,
to the belief that what exists is a spacetime world in which the
momentary substances making up permanent substances are spacetime
events, and Weyl said, &quot;The great advance in our knowledge . .
. consists in recognizing that the scene of action of reality is not
a three-dimensional Euclidean space but rather a <b>four-dimensional
world in which space and time are linked together indissolubly</b>.
However deep the chasm may be that separates the intuitive nature of
space from that of time in our experience, nothing of this
qualitative difference enters into the objective world which physics
endeavors to crystallize out of direct experience. It is a
four-dimensional continuum, which is neither “time” nor “space”.
Only the consciousness that passes on in one portion of this world
experiences the detached piece which comes to meet and passes behind
it, as <b>history </b>that is, as the process that is going forward
in time and takes place in space.&quot;
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western">Weyl is assuming that
empirical falsification of substantivalism about spacetime can be
avoided by holding that the present is just how spacetime and the
spacetime events it contains <i>appear </i>to “consciousness”.
Though such a response may be acceptable in epistemological
philosophy, it leads to an ontology that is decidedly inferior to
the endurance theory, because it is more complex and problematic. To
assume that consciousness “passes on” is to assume that <i>it
</i>undergoes real change, and thus, to follow Weyl is to postulate,
in addition to spacetime and the spacetime events that it contains,
some substance that does endure through time, always existing at
each moment as it is present, namely, consciousness. If
consciousness is postulated as a subjective substance, spacetime
substantivalism will not only be more complex (now postulating three
basic kinds of substances), but it will also face a serious
ontological problem, for it must then be explained how enduring
substances can be related to non-temporal substances. Indeed, it
would be an ontology with two different concepts of time, one that
is part of the structure of spacetime and another that characterizes
the existence of consciousness (as a substance enduring through
time). That twofold use of time complicates the perdurance theory in
a way that makes it not only more complex simpler, but also far more
problematic.
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western">Weyl's approach is still a
common response, however. For example, see <font color="#0000ff"><u><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#Penrose">Penrose
</a></u></font>[1989], pp. 442ff. And though McCall [1994] is only
trying to rescue the openness of the future, his ontology (or “model
of the universe) is also made more complex and problematic by
requiring both these concepts of time.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote2">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western" style="margin-top: 0cm"><a name="OaklanderSmith"></a>
<a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote2sym" href="#sdendnote2anc">ii</a><sup>[2]</sup>
To hold that only the present exists is to take sides with the
so-called “tensed theory of time” in a current dispute in the
philosophy of language (<font color="#0000ff"><u><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#OaklanderSmith">Oaklander
and Smith</a></u></font>, [1994]), but that does not mean that the
perdurance theory can be defended by endorsing the “tenseless
theory of time”. The endurance theory would hold that the tensed
theory of time is correct in holding that statements about past,
present and future say something about the world that is not implied
by tenseless descriptions of before- and after-relations that hold
among events (or by analyzing the truth conditions of such
statements as indexical references to the moment of their utterance)
The tenseless theory must deny that only the present exists, for
otherwise it would have to admit that statements about past,
present, and future are something more than descriptions of an
events before or after relations to the moment of their
utterance. Such statements uttered at present would also be (true)
descriptions of how the event is <i>related to what exists</i>. And
those uttered at other moments would have <i>no </i>truth value, for
they wouldnt exist at all.</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western">There may be a standoff
between these two views in the philosophy of language. But that is
not relevant here, because our reason for preferring the endurance
theory is not based on analyzing truth conditions of statements
about the past, present and future. It is an argument in <i>empirical
ontology</i>. I am arguing that the best ontological explanation of
the world disclosed by perception, including the observation of real
change, is to postulate only enduring substances.
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western"><a name="WilliamsC"></a>The
tensed theory has not been defended in this way in the recent
debate. Appealing to <i>what we observe </i>is not the same as
appealing to phenomenology, as in Part III of <font color="#0000ff"><u><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#OaklanderSmith">Oaklander
and Smith</a></u></font> [1994]. The former argument is not refuted
by pointing out that the observation would have the same causal
connections on the timeless view, for it is about the <i>content </i>of
the observation, not its <i>causal role</i>. And though this view
implies that there are properties of “presentness”, “pastness”
and “futureness”, their meanings are explained in terms of
existence: the present is what exists, while the past and future do
not, albeit for opposite reasons. Thus, contrary to <font color="#0000ff"><u><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/ObjText/#WilliamsC">Williams
</a></u></font>[1994], there is a basic disanalogy between
“presentness” and “hereness”, for what is opposed to the
former (past and future) does not exist, whereas what is opposed to
the latter (what is over there) does exist.</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote-western">Nor is a theory that
explains how the present is different from the past and future by
its existence plagued by the paradoxes that are supposed to undo the
tensed theory of time. For example, it avoids McTaggarts paradox
about time, for it is not committed to there being events that have
first the property of being future, then the property of being
present, and finally the property of being past, for nothing exists
but what exists at present. Nor are there sentences about past,
present and future changing truth values, for the only sentences
that exist (and are capable of being either true or false) are in
the present.</p>
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