The two images above are from Unsplash, Creative Commons: the clock is by Steve Johnson and the woman's face by Kristijan Arsov. The image of the flowing water is from Weebly and is acknowledged at the bottom of this page.
There are many kinds of process in process philosophy. One is clock time and another is lived time. Clock time is picturable. We can imagine this kind of time in "spatialized" units, whether numbers on a clock or images of "moments" drawn on a chalkboard, extending from left to right. Lived time is different. It is the temporality of lived experience, understood through memory and anticipation, not pictures on chalkboards. Both kinds of time are important, but lived time is not "spatialized." It is best understood intuitively and through stories. Whitehead speaks of it as concrescence; Bergson as duration. In order to understand this kind of time, throw away pictures for a moment and dive into the immediacy of experience, which is, after all, where we always are.
- Jay McDaniel, 9/22/2022
- Jay McDaniel, 9/22/2022