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Temporality
In philosophy, temporality is traditionally the linear progression of past, present, and future. However, some modern-century philosophers have interpreted temporality in ways other than this linear manner. Examples would be McTaggart's ''The Unreality of Time'', Husserl's analysis of internal time consciousness, Martin Heidegger's ''Being and Time'' (1927), George Herbert Mead's Philosophy of the Present (1932), and Jacques Derrida's criticisms of Husserl's analysis, as well as Nietzsche's eternal return of the same, though this latter pertains more to historicity, to which temporality gives rise. In social sciences, temporality is also studied with respect to human's perception of time and the social organization of time.〔Muhammad Aurang Zeb Mughal (2014) (Time, Space and Social Change in Rural Pakistan: An Ethnographic Study of Jhokwala Village, Lodhran District ). PhD Thesis. Durham University.〕 The perception of time undergoes significant change in the three hundred years between the Middle Ages and Modernity.〔Richard Utz, "Negotiating Heritage: Observations on Semantic Concepts, Temporality, and the Centre of the Study of the Cultural Heritage of Medieval Rituals," ''Philologie im Netz'' 58 (2011): 70-87〕 ==See also==
*Historicity (philosophy)
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