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Knowledge
Time

Does the future exist in any knowable fashion? If so, can it be known in any absolute way? If not, why do so many of us believe it can?
Accepted:
October 7, 2005

Comments

Peter Lipton
October 7, 2005 (changed October 7, 2005) Permalink

On one view of time, the future is as real now as the present or the past, much as other places are as real as the place you happen to be; on another view the future is not yet real but will be. Either way, many philosophers would say that we can know some things about it, though Hume's great sceptical argument against induction attacks this idea. But Hume's argument is not especially about the future: it applies to any inference from what we have observed to what we have not observed, whether what we have not observed is in the future, present or past. In any event, it's not very surprising that we believe we can know something about the future, since we have so often formed expectations that we have subsequently found to be satisfied.

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