Time in Music and Culture
Bielawski, Ludwik
Time in Music and Culture - Bern Peter Lang International Academic Publishing Group 2020 - 1 electronic resource (406 p.)
Open Access
From Aristotle to Heidegger, philosophers distinguished two orders of time, before, after and past, present, future, presenting them in a wide range of interpretations. It was only around the turn of the 1970s that two theories of time which deliberately went beyond that tradition, enhancing our notional apparatus, were produced independently of one another. The nature philosopher Julius T. Fraser, founder of the interdisciplinary International Society for the Study of Time, distinguished temporal levels in the evolution of the Cosmos and the structure of the human mind: atemporality,prototemporality,eotemporality,biotemporality andnootemporality. The author of the book distinguishes two ‘dimensions’ in time: the dimension of the sequence of time (syntagmatic) and the dimension of the sizes of duration or frequency (systemic). On the systemic scale, the author distinguishes, in human ways of existing and acting, a visual zone, zone of the psychological present, zone of works and performances, zone of the natural and cultural environment, zone of individual and social life and zone of history, myth and tradition. In this book, the author provides a synthesis of these theories.
Creative Commons
English
b15917 9783631791226 9783631791233 9783631791240 9783631790618
10.3726/b15917 doi
Theory of music & musicology
Folk & traditional music
Philosophy
Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography
2015 Akademii Bielawski Culture Czas Folk Music Instytut kulturze Music muzyce Nauk Polskiej Psychological Present Space Sztuki Temporality Time Time Zones Warszawa Zonality
Time in Music and Culture - Bern Peter Lang International Academic Publishing Group 2020 - 1 electronic resource (406 p.)
Open Access
From Aristotle to Heidegger, philosophers distinguished two orders of time, before, after and past, present, future, presenting them in a wide range of interpretations. It was only around the turn of the 1970s that two theories of time which deliberately went beyond that tradition, enhancing our notional apparatus, were produced independently of one another. The nature philosopher Julius T. Fraser, founder of the interdisciplinary International Society for the Study of Time, distinguished temporal levels in the evolution of the Cosmos and the structure of the human mind: atemporality,prototemporality,eotemporality,biotemporality andnootemporality. The author of the book distinguishes two ‘dimensions’ in time: the dimension of the sequence of time (syntagmatic) and the dimension of the sizes of duration or frequency (systemic). On the systemic scale, the author distinguishes, in human ways of existing and acting, a visual zone, zone of the psychological present, zone of works and performances, zone of the natural and cultural environment, zone of individual and social life and zone of history, myth and tradition. In this book, the author provides a synthesis of these theories.
Creative Commons
English
b15917 9783631791226 9783631791233 9783631791240 9783631790618
10.3726/b15917 doi
Theory of music & musicology
Folk & traditional music
Philosophy
Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography
2015 Akademii Bielawski Culture Czas Folk Music Instytut kulturze Music muzyce Nauk Polskiej Psychological Present Space Sztuki Temporality Time Time Zones Warszawa Zonality
