I have seldom found much need to approach the study of time as a philosophical exercise. I think most scientists are perfectly comfortable working with the ideas of time, whether relativistic or Newtonian, without agonizing over how to categorize it within philosophy.I don't care about the rest of the thread. I've not read it either.
Does time exist ontologically or only within a thinking mind? That is, is time an actual thing or an idea?
Based on your answer above it would seem you think it to be the latter, an idea. You said, in so many words, that it is the duration of (or between) events and that it is a mathematical construct, both of which plant it firmly in the category of an abstraction rather than an actual thing. Would you agree with that?
Resting in Him,
Clete
As to the reality of time, I am firmly in the relativistic camp. I think of time in much the same way as I do any of the other spatial dimensions. Both time and space exist independent of any cognitive recognition of their existence, in the same way sound (pressure waves in air) exist in a forest when no one is there.