Summary |
One of the central debates in the philosophy of time is between
the A-theorists and the B-theorists. These unhelpful labels can be
traced
back to John McTaggart's distinction between the A-series and the
B-series. The A-theory of time is typically associated with the idea
that
the present is metaphysically privileged or singled out in some way from
past and future
times. Furthermore, there is genuine flow of time as past events recede
further
and further into the past and future events move closer and closer to
the
present. The A-theorist holds that the properties of being past, being present and being future are fundamental to the nature of time. Presentism, the Growing Block Theory, and the Moving Spotlight
Theory are all versions of the A-theory, providing different accounts of
how
the present is metaphysically distinguished. The B-theory of time, in
contrast, denies that the present is metaphysically privileged over past
and
future times. Just as there is nothing metaphysically special about,
say,
London as opposed to Sydney, the B-theorist maintains that there is
nothing
metaphysically special about the present moment as opposed to, say, the
year 1847 or
2157. |