persistence
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
- Persistence . In: Heinrich Schmidt (greeting), Martin Gessmann (Hrsg.): Philosophical dictionary. 23rd edition. Kröner, Stuttgart 2009, ISBN 978-3-520-01323-1 .
Web links
Wikiquote: Persistence - Quotes
Wiktionary: Persistence - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations
Individual evidence
- ^ 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 )
- ↑ Critique of Pure Reason . Riga 1781/1787, A144 / 183B.
- ↑ Critique of Pure Reason . A242 / B300.