Of Time and Lamentation by Raymond Tallis

Of Time and Lamentation by Raymond Tallis

Regular price
Checking stock...
Regular price
Checking stock...
Summary

A bold, original and thought-provoking exploration of the nature and meaning of time. Tallis, with characteristic fearlessness, seeks to reclaim time from the jaws of physics, arguing that time as it is lived, the long narrative of our human journey, can not be told by caesium clocks and Lorentz coordinates.

The feel-good place to buy books
  • Free US shipping over $15
  • Buying preloved emits 41% less CO2 than new
  • Millions of affordable books
  • Give your books a new home - sell them back to us!

Of Time and Lamentation by Raymond Tallis

A bold, original and thought-provoking exploration of the nature and meaning of time. Tallis, with characteristic fearlessness, seeks to reclaim time from the jaws of physics, arguing that time as it is lived, the long narrative of our human journey, can not be told by caesium clocks and Lorentz coordinates.
‘You affirm’, wrote Albert Einstein to his best friend Michel Besso, that the transition from ‘lived experience to objectivity… is accompanied by suffering, which – if one interprets as a physicist – is tied to irreversible processes’The physicist befuddled by the complexity of the question simply replied, ‘I do not know how to help you’. Now Raymond Tallis takes on the challenge, bravely going where few have ventured, investigating the painful nature of time’s passage, one intimately felt yet stubbornly denied by numerous scientists. Of Time and Lamentation is an important philosophical investigation, at the same time personal and scholarly – a bold and original experiment where art and poetry are given as much importance as science, measurements and equations. -- Jimena Canales, Thomas M. Siebel Chair in the History of Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and author of The Physicist and the Philosopher

There is hardly a thinking person who has not been struck, at some stage in life, by the deep mystery of time. How is it that things come into being and then pass away? What is a moment, and what flows as the moments succeed each other? What is it to exist in time, and is time another dimension, like the three dimensions of space? Can time be recaptured, replayed, or is all time unredeemable? Does time as described by the theory of relativity square with time as experienced by you and me? All these questions and many more besides well up in the minds of thinking people as soon as they begin to reflect on the nature of time, and in this book Raymond Tallis spells them out clearly, systematically and sympathetically, so as to give the fullest examination to date, both of time as part of the fabric of reality, and of time as the condition of self-conscious experience. He does not solve the mystery, but his argument deepens it in a fascinating way. Written with scholarly rigour and lively humour, this study of the greatest source of our metaphysical anxieties will provide hours of pleasure and instruction to all who delve into it.

-- Professor Sir Roger Scruton
'One always tends to overpraise a long book simply because one has got through it.' This observation by E. M. Forster must be heeded by any reviewer of a book as long as Raymond Tallis’s latest offering. But praise it one must, because it succeeds in something that has defeated many before him. He manages to rescue the study of time from the scientists’ arid reductionism, and give it a human face. Tallis has been described as one of the world’s leading polymaths, with a gift for communicating complex ideas with a lightly worn but persuasive authority. He is not afraid of appealing to mystery as a respectable notion at a time when theories purporting to explain everything in physicalist and mathematical terms are to the fore. Above all, he never loses sight of his, and his readers’, lived experience as crucial to making sense of what science can describe but not fully explain. -- John Saxbee, Church Times

Of Time and Lamentation aims at 'rescuing time from the jaws of physics'. It is a worthy goal and a persuasive argument. . . an absorbing book that will reward the patient reader with a deeper insight into the problem of time.

-- Andrew Crumey, Wall Street Journal

I applaud Tallis’s assault on scientism (not to be confused with an assault on science), and am glad (and relieved) to see philosophy defended by someone other than an academic philosopher. His view of the nature and purpose of philosophy is both insightful and beautifully expressed . . . ‘Truly’, observes Larkin, ‘though our element is time, we are not suited to the long perspectives open at each instant of our lives.’ But the balm for the agonies of memory he alludes to may be to take an even longer perspective – a perspective on the nature of time itself – as Raymond Tallis does in this fine book.

-- Robin Le Poidevin, Times Literary Supplement
. . .astonishing magnum opus, the product of decades of scrupulous, far-reaching, and detailed engagement with a huge range of interlocking disciplines, from medicine and psychology to physics, history, theology and philosophy. It asks the biggest questions, and offers big and challenging answers. Tallis is renowned as one of the most poly of contemporary polymaths, and in Of Time and Lamentation he has produced the sort of book that absolutely requires to be read closely and digested over time. -- Adam Roberts, The New Atlantis
Tallis is a true polymath and approaches his topic with a generosity of sweep that is breath-taking ... [he] touches on the philosophy of time and of science, on geometry, physics and neuroscience, on art and literature, on theology, on geological deep time, on the history of time measurement, on ethics, to name just the most prominent fields ... This allows him to present an argument which transcends the usual disciplinary limitations. At the same time, this is a deeply personal book, the result of the struggle of one individual to come to terms with his mortality and insignificance in the larger scale of things ... his book provides immense riches of different perspectives, theories and arguments, which he succeeds to present in a gripping way that will make even difficult concepts and ideas available to the lay reader ... a readable, highly informative and wide-reaching insight into some of the main problems, paradoxes and challenges of our personal, existential and theoretical engagement with time. -- Irmtraud Huber, KronoScope
Raymond Tallis is Professor of Geriatric Medicine at the University of Manchester and Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences. Over the last 15 years he has published extensively outside the field of medicine. There have been three books which mount a critique of post-structuralist theory: Not Saussure: A Critique of Post-saussurean Literary Theory (Macmillan, 2nd edn, 1995), In Defence of Realism (Arnold & University of Nebraska Press, 2nd edn, 1998) and Theorrhoea and After (Macmillan, 1998). He has also published four books in the philosophy of mind: The Explicit Animal: A Defence of Human Consciousness (Macmillan, 1991), The Pursuit of Mind (co-edited with Howard Robinson, Carcanet, 1991), Psycho Electronics (Ferrington, 1994) and On the Edge of Certainty and Other Essays (Macmillan, 1999). Further books include Newton's Sleep: The Two Cultures and the Two Kingdoms (Macmillan, 1995), Enemies of Hope: A Critique of Contemporary Pessimism (Macmillan, 1997) and A Conversation with Martin Heidegger (Macmillan (Palgrave), 2002). An anthology of his theoretical writing - The Raymond Tallis Reader, edited by Michael Grant - was published by Macmillan (Palgrave) in 2000. He was awarded the degree of Doctor of Letters (hon causa) at the University of Hull in 1997 for his non-medical writings and the degree of Doctor of Letters (hon causa) at the University of Manchester in 2003 for 'contributions to literary theory and our understanding of human consciousness’. The Knowing Animal is the final volume in the trilogy of books for EUP which began with The Hand and continued with I Am.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9781788211741
ISBN 10 178821174X
Title Of Time and Lamentation
Author Raymond Tallis
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Agenda Publishing
Year published 2019-05-30
Number of pages 736
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.