TIME
Feb 11, 2005
Dear Friends,
Don't forget that next Sunday at 1pm we are meeting outside the Thyssen Museum
to go an see the exhibition on German Expressionism. I think that it is more
practical to go for a quick lunch after the exhibition.
It is only fitting that after such a packed day we meet at 6.30pm to discuss
TIME.
Take care and see you Sunday.
Lawrence
SUNDAY 6.30pm START at Molly Malone's Pub, probably downstairs, but just in
case there is no football on go to the very back of the pub, then turn left
and left again!
philomadrid@yahoo.co.uk
Subscribe yahoo group send an email to:
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tel 606081813
www.geocities.com/philomadrid
Pub Molly Malone, c/ Manuela MalasaƱa, 11, Madrid 28004
metro: <Bilbao> : buses: 21, 149, 147
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TIME
Time is an important issue in science, and by default in philosophy. This means
that it is a mature subject in the same way that some markets are mature
markets. In other words, it is very difficult to come up with innovative and new
ideas on the subject.
For this reason, it might be worth our while to look at time in our normal
day-to-day setting. Applied philosophy is, in any case, part of our
philosophical activities.
In that case let us start with the most famous scientist. Einstein, is quoted to
have said, "Put your hand on a hot stove for a minute, and it seems like an
hour. Sit with a pretty girl for an hour, and it seems like a minute. That's
relativity."*
I can, of course, thoroughly confirm half of Einstein's experiment, but
evolution made sure I will not try the other half. This means that we don't have
conclusive proof of this experiment. Another way of explaining Einstein's
dilemma is by invoking the law of diminishing returns. What if he sat one year
next to the pretty girl, how relative would relativity be?
The real point about Einstein's dilemma, however, is that pleasant things seem
to come to an end very quickly. The issue ought to be then, why do we have the
impression that pleasant things in life are limited? Even limited to the extent
that they seem an exception rather than the rule. Why is it that both Einstein
and the rest of us don't seem to have enough time to sit next to anyone for
long, never mind pretty girls? And this is not a question of whether time flies
or stands still.
We can either look at pleasant things as being limited in duration and frequency
or that pleasant things are the culmination of our efforts and work over a
period of time. In other words the tip of life's iceberg.
If in real life pleasant things are the culmination of our efforts then pleasant
things are the dividend we receive for investing over time. If pleasant things
are really short and rare then life must truly be unfair and brutal.
What if we were to take Einstein's dilemma as more than just a causal reaction,
but also an issue about time? Nothing to do with pain or even consciousness, or
diminishing returns. Let us assume for the sake of argument that life is not all
that brutal and pleasant things are in part the product of our effort. Then the
real question is, how long do we have to wait before the pleasant things happen;
a week, a month and year? How long did Einstein have to wait before he had the
opportunity to sit next to the pretty girl in the first place? For me, this is
the crux of the time question. Maybe Einstein did not have to wait that long,
but what about the rest of us?
We know for a fact that in the long term we'll all be dead, so if things were to
happen they'd better happen in the short to medium term. And if we cannot wait
that long, then we had better be that fast. We can be fast, however, if we have
ample resources available. Einstein did write something about converting mass
into energy, but that's another story.
We can therefore either do one thing at a time over a long period of time or we
can do a lot of things, more or less, at once. To put it in another way: one can
try one's luck to sit next to a pretty girl over a period of say, 12 months (we
all know what Einstein meant, so no cheating) or one can try to sit next to as
many pretty girls as one can possibly do over a short period of days. At the
end, at least in theory, we should be able to sit next to a pretty girl for an
hour. Its a matter of doing things concurrently or consecutively.
Is this another way of saying that life is a numbers game? Is there a hint of
the gambler's paradox here? We can play at the roulette table thinking that our
number will come up after the next spin, or we can play all the roulette tables
at the same time. As far as probability is concerned we have not changed the
odds, but we still get the impression that we must really win. But if this is
true then we have no reason to believe such expressions as: time will tell, wait
and see and time heals all wounds. It seems, therefore, that time is neither a
necessary nor a sufficient condition for a pleasant outcome.
This conveniently brings us to another issue in applied philosophy. Since we
don't have an infinite amount of time to sort out our lives, we surely need lots
of resources, and we know what that means for most of us: work. The people who
have access to resources can do lots of things concurrently; if all the above is
to be believed that is.
At least in the context of work things seem to be more clear cut. The theory
goes something like this: the harder one works the greater the rewards. Or, if
you work hard now your just rewards will come later. A version of this theory
also suggests that it is not enough to work hard, but also to work smart.
But we already know that resources are scarce, and as a consequence the question
we have to deal with is how should resources be distributed? Should the rewards
go to those who work hard, smart or both? But we also know that things do not
get more relative than in the field of work.
I am sure that for some a day at work seems to pass as slow as keeping one's
hand on a hot stove for a minute. Is this, however, relativity, boredom or
someone being smarter than us? Have you noticed how those who are handsomely
rewarded at work are not usually paid for their time, but for the results of
their efforts? I mean, the CEO of a multinational company and a charge hand in a
factory both have 24 hours in a day and seven days in a week. Yet the latter is
paid for spending 40 hours working in a factory whilst the other is paid
according to the results of the company. But the connection between time and
work does not end here.
We have the "forty hour week" although in some countries it is 35 and in others,
well they don't even bother about such niceties, after all exploitation has no
time limits. Take the weekend for example, in the past it started Saturday
afternoon, I'm thinking early 20th century here, now we have two full days. Some
companies even allow employees to start their weekend on Friday afternoon. The
absurd thing, though, is that after more than 200 years since the industrial
revolution we still have 28.571428571428571428571428571429% of the week to
recover and rest.
Again, take the concept of overtime, usually paid at 1.5 times the normal rate.
In the media it was recently reported that a study by the TUC (Trade Unions'
Council) concluded that British workers worked as much as ?23bn worth of unpaid
overtime in 2004. That's an average equivalent of £4,650 unpaid wages per
employee; 6,756.76 Euros.
If all the above means anything, it certainly means that time is directly
associated with some ethical issues.
On the plus side, time does keep the wheels of society oiled and synchronised.
Well, to begin with, as Einstein pointed out, yet again, "the only reason for
time is so that everything doesn't happen at once."
Maybe the weekends are short, but it helps if we all stopped work at more or
less the same time. This would enable us to meet friends or do those chores we
do not want to or cannot do during the week. But we cannot meet anyone unless we
can agree the time and place to meet. Even when we do, we still depend on such
things as transport, whether the places we intend to visit are open and of
course our friends actually turning up (on time). However, all these activities
depend on an important idea: convenience. For example, if public transport does
not operate at the time we want to meet our friends, we have very few options:
we don't meet our friends, walk, go by car or whatever. If the shops we want to
visit are not open when we want to go and do the shopping then we have very few
options left. This chain of thought immediately introduces the idea of
compromise to the idea of convenience. However, convenience and compromise are
not only limited to transport or shops.
I mean, some politicians insist in getting their way or no way at all. Some
pressure groups insist on getting their own way or else God help us. Consumers
insist on cheap goods now or they'll go to the competition. Companies, using
shareholders as an excuse, insist that quarterly figures are always in the
black, or else the bottom 10% of performers are sacked. Instant gratification
seems to be the order of the day.
In some cases what started out as convenience, turned into instant
gratification, which in turn left little scope for compromise ending up ousting
tolerance from our language. Maybe when pretty girls leave our company, it is
not only time that seems to fly away.
take care
Lawrence
http://en.thinkexist.com/
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