
However, The Daily Telegraph's Roger Highfield, and this week's New Scientist, both report on Itzhak Bars's suggestion that time may have two dimensions. If true, this requires a modification to what philosophers call the 'endurantist' notion of the persistence of an object through time. The endurantist position holds that the object which possesses a property at one time, is the same whole object which does or does not possess that property at another time. If the specification of a particular time requires the specification of two time coordinates, then the properties of an object could vary as one time coordinate is held fixed, but the other is varied. Is this the same 'whole' object which is varying or not?
There is an alternative to endurantism, dubbed the 'perdurantist' view, which holds that an object has temporal parts, and different temporal parts can possess different properties. On the perdurantist view, the persistence of an object through time is analogous to the extension of an object in space, and the different temporal parts can possess different properties just as much as the different spatial parts of an object can possess different properties. Introducing a second time dimension poses no problems, then, to perdurantism. An object's temporal extension simply extends into more than one temporal dimension.
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