Time, Religion and History

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A01=William Gallois
Abd Al Wahhab
Al Hakam II
Ancient Judaism
Andalusi Culture
australian
Australian Art
Australian Cultures
Australian Dreamtime
Australian Religion
Author_William Gallois
Buddhist Dialectic
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Category=NHA
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chronology studies
comparative religion analysis
cultural time perception
culture
cultures
cycles
dreamtime
Elizabeth Deeds Ermarth
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eq_history
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Follow
Georges Braque
Historiographical Consciousness
historiographical theory
Hold
Ibn Rushd
Ibn Tufayl
interdisciplinary study of time
karmic
Karmic Cycle
modern
Muslim World
Newtonian Time
Provisional Stages
religious
religious temporalities
scientific time concepts
Spanish Language
temporal
Temporal Cultures
Temporal Grammar
west
X-ray Paintings
Zen History

Product details

  • ISBN 9780582784529
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Sep 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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What is time? How does our sense of time lead us to approach the world? How did the peoples of the past view time? This book answers these questions through an investigation of the cultures of time in Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Judaism and the Australian Dreamtime. It argues that our contemporary world is blind as to the significance and complexity of time, preferring to believe that time is natural and unchanging. This is of critical importance to historians since the base matter of their study is time, yet there is almost no theoretical literature on time in history.

This book offers the first detailed historiographical study of the centrality of time to human cultures. It sets out the complex ways in which ideas of time developed in the major world religions, and the manner in which such conceptions led people both to live in ways very different to our contemporary world and to make very different kinds of histories. It goes on to argue that modern scientific descriptions of time, such as Einsteins Theory of Relativity, lie much closer to the complex understandings of time in religions such as Christianity than they do to our common-sense notions of time which are centred on progress through a past, present and future.

William Gallois is Senior Lecturer in Modern History, RoehamptonUniversity.

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