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    FRACTAL TIME
    Why a Watched Kettle Never Boils

    by Susie Vrobel (Institute for Fractal Research, Germany)

    Table of Contents (194k)
    Preface (49k)
    Chapter 1: When Time Slows Down: Subjective Duration (373k)

    This book provides an interdisciplinary introduction to the notion of fractal time, starting from scratch with a philosophical and perceptual puzzle. How subjective duration varies, depending on the way we embed current content into contexts, is explained.

    The complexity of our temporal perspective depends on the number of nestings performed, i.e. on the number of contexts taken into account. This temporal contextualization is described against the background of the notion of fractal time. Our temporal interface, the Now, is portrayed as a fractal structure which arises from the distribution of content and contexts in two dimensions: the length and the depth of time. The leitmotif of the book is the notion of simultaneity, which determines the temporal structure of our interfaces.

    Recent research results are described which present and discuss a number of distorted temporal perspectives. It is suggested that dynamical diseases arise from unsuccessful nesting attempts, i.e. from failed contextualization. Successful nesting, by contrast, manifests itself in a “win-win handshake” between the observer-participant and his chosen context. The answer as to why a watched kettle never boils has repercussions in many a discipline. It would be of immense interest to anyone who works in the fields of cognitive and complexity sciences, psychology and the neurosciences, social medicine, philosophy and the arts.

     
    Contents:
    • When Time Slows Down
    • Subjective Duration
    • The Fractal Structure of the Now: Time's Length, Depth and Density
    • Fractal Temporal Perspectives
    • Corrective Distortions
    • The View from Within: Extended Boundaries
    • Contextualization: Embedded Observer-Participants
    • Temporal Binding: Synchronizing Perceptions
    • Nesting vs Global and Local Perspectives
    • Duration: Distributing Content and Context
    • Modifying Duration I: Nesting and De-Nesting
    • Modifying Duration II: Time Condensation
    • Defining Boundaries: Why is It Always Now?
    • Outlook: Here Be Dragons
     
    Readership: Cognitive scientists, philosophers working on the topic of time, cyberneticists and systems theorists focusing on nested systems and connectivity, mathematicians and logicians working on fractals and nested systems, psychologists and psychoanalysts interested in contextualization abilities, psycholinguists and neuro-scientists working on synchronization, medical practitioners focusing on integrative health care, theoretical physicists concerned with time, nonlinear dynamics, causality and connectedness and teachers contemplating the effect of temporal contextualization.
     
     
    312pp    Pub. date: Jan 2011  
    ISBN:   978-981-4295-97-0
    981-4295-97-3
       US$96 / £62

     


    312pp    Pub. date: Jan 2011  
    ISBN:   978-981-4295-98-7(ebook)
    981-4295-98-1(ebook)
       US$125

     


     

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    Updated on 22 February 2012