persistence

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Persistence denotes a mode of time in ontological philosophy .

Greek antiquity

Aristotle understood persistence to mean the state of things that either do not or regularly - i.e. H. not random - change.

Epistemology

In the epistemological context, according to Immanuel Kant , persistence is a mode of time through which the scheme of the category of substance is to be formed. “The schema of substance”, says Kant in his Critique of Pure Reason , “is the persistence of the real in time, that is the idea of ​​the same as a substratum of empirical time determination in general, which thus remains while everything else changes. "A little later, Kant defines persistence as" an existence at all times ".

See also

literature

Web links

Wiktionary: Persistence  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Martin Heidegger : Complete Edition, 2nd section: Lectures 1923-1944 . Volume 31: On the nature of human freedom. 2nd Edition. Vittorio Klostermann, Frankfurt am Main 1994, ISBN 3-465-02655-1 , p. 158 . ( limited online version in Google Book Search - USA )
  2. Critique of Pure Reason . Riga 1781/1787, A144 / 183B.
  3. Critique of Pure Reason . A242 / B300.