Why do we have tensed beliefs? Issue1 #110918 How do we explain the existence of tensed beliefs and tensed emotions? Why do we attach different significance to past, present and future? |
|
+Citations (1)
- CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] 'Thank Goodness That's Over': The Evolutionary Story
Author: Dyke, Heather and Maclaurin, James - Otago University, New Zealand Cited by: Peter Baldwin 3:35 AM 3 June 2011 GMT Citerank: (3) 110917Tensed beliefs - not tensed factsThe block universe view (or McTaggart 'B-theory') does not deny that beliefs can be tensed, such as the belief that some unpleasant experience is past. However the truth-maker for any tensed belief is a tenseless fact.959C6EF, 110919Evolutionary adaptationThere are good reasons for thinking that evolutionary selection would favor creatures with tensed beliefs about and attitudes to future and past events.959C6EF, 110921Plausibility defenseEvolutionary explanations differ greatly in plausibility. The above account of the origin of tensed beliefs is at the plausible end of the spectrum.13EF597B URL:
|
Excerpt / Summary "But something remains unexplained by this B-theory explanation of my emotional attitude to past and future pain. Why is dread only appropriate before the pain, and relief only appropriate after it? This aspect of Prior’s challenge has recently been articulated and reissued against the new B-theory of time by David Cockburn (1997, see also his 1998).
Cockburn argues that the new B-theory must ultimately be committed to a radical revision of our emotional lives, since it cannot square our different emotional responses to past, present and future events with the claim that they are all equally real. The B-theory, according to Cockburn, faces an unhappy dilemma. It must provide an explanation for the different kinds of significance that we attach to past, present and future events (something he believes it is unable to do). Alternatively, it must urge that we abandon our usual emotional responses to past, present and future events in favour of a pattern of responses whereby all events are equally significant. According to Cockburn, unless the B-theory can provide a rational justification for our asymmetric emotional attitudes, it is forced to take the revisionary alternative." |