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Knife-edge and saddleback: Augustine & William James on the Psychology of the specious present

dc.contributor.authorHannan, Sean
dc.date.accessioned2021-06-16
dc.date.accessioned2022-05-31T01:43:56Z
dc.date.available2022-05-31T01:43:56Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.description.abstractIn the late nineteenth century, William James raised the possibility that an ill-defined notion of ‘the present time’ might cause problems for future psychologists. This line of inquiry ultimately took James in a sanguine direction, as he convinced himself and many others that, even if our notion of the now remains fuzzy, we should proceed on the basis of whatever vague sense of the present seems appropriate for our clinical or experimental purposes. Almost fifteen hundred years before James, this same question of a specious present was asked by the Christian author Augustine of Hippo as part of an introspective interrogation of time in his Confessions. Augustine’s findings were less sanguine. The present, it turns out, is hard for us to define because it has no proper definition. In other words: the ‘now’ is not natural to time. And if that is the case, then time-bound animals like human beings would also be subject to a time without present. To try to describe the human psyche and diagnose its maladies while relying upon the idea of a specious present could cause us to mis-describe and misdiagnose the very phenomena we seek to explain or even heal. We thus find Augustine and James at odds over the specious present. In order to adjudicate their dispute, we should proceed by sketching out James’ psychological remarks and then positioning Augustine’s philosophical account against James. Once that has been done, we can try to nod in the direction of a way forward by introducing a third perspective, here tentatively termed ‘phenomenological,’ but originally rooted in the empirical psychology of James’ contemporary from the continent: Franz Brentano.
dc.format.extent453.72KB
dc.format.mimetypePDF
dc.identifier.citationHannan, Sean. “Knife-Edge & Saddleback: Augustine & William James on the Psychology of the Specious Present.” Consensus 40, no. 2 (2019), 5.1-12.
dc.identifier.issn2369-2685 (Online); ISSN: 0317-1493 (Print)
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14078/2340
dc.languageEnglish
dc.language.isoen
dc.rightsAll Rights Reserved
dc.subjectWilliam James
dc.subjectAugustine of Hippo
dc.subjectspecious present
dc.subjectFranz Brentano
dc.subjectempirical psychology
dc.subjectstream of consciousness
dc.subjectnineteenth-century psychologist
dc.subjectsaddleback hypothesis
dc.subjectcurrent mental state
dc.subjectprotention
dc.titleKnife-edge and saddleback: Augustine & William James on the Psychology of the specious presenten
dc.typeArticle
dspace.entity.type

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