Explore Bergson’s lasting mystery of time and becoming, explained for the thoughtful reader.
This concise study examines the core idea of duration and how it shapes our understanding of reality. It analyzes Bergson’s claim that time is a living, creative process, not a mere sequence of instants, and weighs this against intellectualist views of a fixed, mechanistic universe.
Through careful argument and close reading, the book discusses how duration implies continual novelty, unpredictable change, and a sense of real time. It also grapples with what this means for free will, consciousness, and the nature of existence, offering a clear, skeptical assessment of Bergson’s theory.
- Clear explanation of duration as a form of time that unfolds with the absolutely new.
- Discussion of how intellect and experience relate to Bergson’s ideas.
- Examination of the tension between temporalism and intellectualism in philosophy.
- Critical look at the implications for reality, time, and conscious life.
Ideal for readers of philosophy who want a grounded, critical look at Bergson’s influence and its relevance to debates on time and mind.