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About Time : Inventing the Fourth Dimension

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Few intellectual problems are as intriguing or as difficult as understanding the nature of time. In About Time , William Friedman provides a new integrated look at research on the psychological processes that underlie the human experience of time. He explains what psychologists have discovered about temporal perception and cognition since the publication of Paul Fraisse's The Psychology of Time in 1963 and offers fresh interpretations of their findings.

In particular he shows that the experience of time depends on many different psychological processes and that it is essential to divide temporal experience into component categories in order to understand these processes.

In chapters on perception and memory, Friedman discusses our impressions about the rate of time's passage and our ability to localize memories in time. He takes up representation and orientation, our ability to build mental representations of the time structures that surround us and to view these patterns from the unique perspective of the present moment. Moreover he shows that we can learn a great deal about the psychological basis of temporal experience by studying the development of this knowledge in children and the way in which views of time vary by culture, personality type, and kind of psychopathology.

William J. Friedman is Associate Professor of Psychology at Oberlin College.

157 pages, Hardcover

First published August 9, 1990

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Profile Image for Steve Casner.
Author 2 books9 followers
July 4, 2017
One of my favorite psych books. Like a good review article except more fun to read.
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