Glossary entry (derived from question below)
Polish term or phrase:
okrężność
English translation:
circularity
Added to glossary by
Frank Szmulowicz, Ph. D.
Nov 16, 2013 15:26
10 yrs ago
1 viewer *
Polish term
okrężność
Polish to English
Art/Literary
Photography/Imaging (& Graphic Arts)
philosophy of photography
Jednym z najoczywistszych sposobów doświadczania czasu jest następstwo zdarzeń, które możemy uszeregować według relacji „wcześniej” i „później”. Możliwe wydaje się wyprowadzenie jednowymiarowości lub okrężności z porządku przyczynowego, przedstawionego w zdjęciu.
Proposed translations
(English)
3 +2 | circularity | Frank Szmulowicz, Ph. D. |
3 +1 | circularity of cause and effect | mike23 |
Change log
Nov 21, 2013 13:46: Frank Szmulowicz, Ph. D. Created KOG entry
Proposed translations
+2
11 mins
Selected
circularity
What else?
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Note added at 20 mins (2013-11-16 15:47:26 GMT)
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Time has traditionally been viewed as either like a circle or like a line. Plato, Aristotle and many other Greek and Roman thinkers, particularly the Stoics, advocated a circular view of time. Linear time first appeared in Hebrew and Zoroastrian Iranian writings. Seneca was an advocate of linear time. Augustine thought time was specifically like a line segment. It had a distinct beginning and end, from Genesis to judgement day. Later on Aquinas agreed, and even further on Newton mathematically represented time as a line in his equations. Prominent thinkers such as Barrow, Leibniz, Locke and Kant all agreed with a linear type of time, and in the 19th century time was widely regarded, in both philosophy and science, like a line. It wasn't until 1949, when Kurt Godel, working with Einstein's equations, developed "closed loops of proper time", which are semi-circular in that they allow one to end up where they started after going forward in time. (From the internet encylopedia of philosophy - http://www.iep.utm.edu/t/time.htm)
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Note added at 20 mins (2013-11-16 15:47:26 GMT)
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Time has traditionally been viewed as either like a circle or like a line. Plato, Aristotle and many other Greek and Roman thinkers, particularly the Stoics, advocated a circular view of time. Linear time first appeared in Hebrew and Zoroastrian Iranian writings. Seneca was an advocate of linear time. Augustine thought time was specifically like a line segment. It had a distinct beginning and end, from Genesis to judgement day. Later on Aquinas agreed, and even further on Newton mathematically represented time as a line in his equations. Prominent thinkers such as Barrow, Leibniz, Locke and Kant all agreed with a linear type of time, and in the 19th century time was widely regarded, in both philosophy and science, like a line. It wasn't until 1949, when Kurt Godel, working with Einstein's equations, developed "closed loops of proper time", which are semi-circular in that they allow one to end up where they started after going forward in time. (From the internet encylopedia of philosophy - http://www.iep.utm.edu/t/time.htm)
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Joanna Carroll
3 mins
|
I am most grateful for your support here.
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agree |
mike23
: Seems we are on the same wavelength
4 mins
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Thanks. It must be superluminal mental telepathy via tachyons (which would violate the cause and effect hypothesis).
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
+1
14 mins
circularity of cause and effect
I've seen such a term. Hope it is the one sought
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Frank Szmulowicz, Ph. D.
: In the sentence, "the causal order" relates to "the cause and effect," of course. However, I wonder whether this is not about an artistic/inner perception of time.
18 mins
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Cheers. Artistic perception of a sequence of events, you mean? Who knows. I was also thinking of circular causality referring to mutual interactions of causes and consequences. anyway
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Discussion
Bo jeśli zdać się na synonimy tego słowa - eufemizm/oględność/ułagodzenie/etc. - to "circularity" bierze w... główkę :)
Time has traditionally been viewed as either like a circle or like a line. Plato, Aristotle and many other Greek and Roman thinkers, particularly the Stoics, advoated a circular view of time. Linear time first appeared in Hebrew and Zoroastrian Iranian writings. Seneca was an advocate of linear time. Augustine thought time was specifically like a line segment. It had a distinct beginning and end, from Genesis to judgement day. Later on Aquinas agreed, and even further on Newton mathematically represented time as a line in his equations. Prominent thinkers such as Barrow, Leibniz, Locke and Kant all agreed with a linear type of time, and in the 19th century time was widely regarded, in both philosophy and science, like a line. It wasn't until 1949, when Kurt Godel, working with Einstein's equations, developed "closed loops of proper time", which are semi-circular in that they allow one to end up where they started after going forward in time. (From the internet encylopedia of philosophy - http://www.iep.utm.edu/t/time.htm)