
Real Time
A Reinvention in British Metaphysics 1883-1928
Emily Thomas(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Will be published approx. on 7. October 2026
Book
Hardback
448 pages
978-0-19-784448-9 (ISBN)
Description
In 1880s Britain, philosophers developed what would become a half-century obsession with time. In that era, time was widely held to be "unreal"; by the 1920s, it was widely held to be real. This sea change was gradual but sweeping. Early time realists focused on defending the reality of time. From around 1900, they began asking fresh questions about the nature of time, all loosely concerned with its dynamicity---its 'moving on'.
Are the past and future real? Is time fundamentally an 'A-series' or 'B-series': about past, present, and future, or earlier and later? Does time have an intrinsic direction? These questions are still widely debated today. In Real Time, Emily Thomas investigates the reinvention of time realism and follows the emergence of these new, in-house realist debates. Thomas argues these questions are not perennial but rather deeply rooted within this historical context.
The story unfolds through anti-realist figures such as F. H. Bradley and J. M. E. McTaggart, and realists such as Samuel Alexander, Hilda Oakeley, G. E. Moore, Bertrand Russell, C. D. Broad, Alfred North Whitehead, and Arthur Eddington.These figures returned to time repeatedly across their careers, grappling with it in a variety of ways.
Many placed time at the heart of their philosophies.
Through their writings and previously unpublished correspondence, Thomas shows how time became one of the defining philosophical problems of the modern era-a problem that reshaped the very foundations of metaphysics.
Are the past and future real? Is time fundamentally an 'A-series' or 'B-series': about past, present, and future, or earlier and later? Does time have an intrinsic direction? These questions are still widely debated today. In Real Time, Emily Thomas investigates the reinvention of time realism and follows the emergence of these new, in-house realist debates. Thomas argues these questions are not perennial but rather deeply rooted within this historical context.
The story unfolds through anti-realist figures such as F. H. Bradley and J. M. E. McTaggart, and realists such as Samuel Alexander, Hilda Oakeley, G. E. Moore, Bertrand Russell, C. D. Broad, Alfred North Whitehead, and Arthur Eddington.These figures returned to time repeatedly across their careers, grappling with it in a variety of ways.
Many placed time at the heart of their philosophies.
Through their writings and previously unpublished correspondence, Thomas shows how time became one of the defining philosophical problems of the modern era-a problem that reshaped the very foundations of metaphysics.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Illustrations
11 b&w figures
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-19-784448-9 (9780197844489)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Emily Thomas is Professor of Philosophy at Durham University. She has published widely on the history of metaphysics (especially space and time) and on historical women philosophers. Thomas' research has been supported by the NWO, the AHRC, and the British Academy. In 2020, she won a Leverhulme Prize for research excellence.
Content
- Introduction
- 1: Three Victorian Ideas around Time: Evolution, Linearity, and Progress
- 2: The Rise of Unreal Time and British Idealism 1883-1893
- 3: Time Realism: Boosted by the Specious Present and Evolution 1886-1895
- 4: The British Presentism-Eternalism Debate, Founded 1897
- 5: The Genesis of McTaggart's "The Unreality of Time" 1893-1908
- 6: G. E. Moore's Common Sense Realism: Presentism, A-Theory, and the Ghost of Henry Sidgwick (1897-1911)
- 7: A French Interlude: Britain's "Bergson Boom" 1909-1911
- 8: Bertrand Russell on the B-Series and Mental-Physical Time 1901-1915
- 9: Hilda Oakeley's Time Realism: Origins and Bergsonism 1911-1916
- 10: Karin Costelloe-Stephen's Bergsonism and 'The Facts' of Time 1911-1922
- 11: Sexism and Time: A Feminist Reading of Oakeley and Costelloe-Stephen's Bergsonian Time
- 12: Samuel Alexander's "Generative" Time and Its Eternalist Universe 1911-1920
- 13: Time, Events, and Passage in A. N. Whitehead's London Years 1911-1920
- 14: C. D. Broad on Eternalism and Growing Block Theory 1913-1928
- 15: Arthur Eddington and Time's Arrow into the Progressive Future 1919-1928
- Afterword