Evoken
New member
While saying he cannot tell us what time is, Augustine, nevertheless, gives us two aspects of time; time as past, present, and future, and time as duration.
I am already aware of your website and by posting the quotes that you did, you are simply repeating the same claim I responded to in my previous post.
I just quoted him where he says that “time is nothing else than distention”. I also provided you additional quotes that show what his view of time is and it is different from the one(s) you are claiming he gave.
Here is another one: "Time then is the result of three activities of the mind (Confessions XI, 28). Time is the measuring by the soul of its expectation, its attention and its memory." (Time as a Psalm in St. Augustine)
The first part of your quote “For what is time? Who can easily and briefly explain it?, etc” is taken from Chapter 14. The other part “And I confess to thee, O Lord, etc” is taken from Chapter 25, which I quoted in my previous post.
You are ignoring the progression of the book and the conclusions St. Augustine reaches from chapter to chapter (you also do this on your website, by omitting much of what he says about time). St. Augustine was a rhetorical writer and you miss the point of those quotes in trying to use them against him. They are not dead ends but appeals to God as inner teacher that he makes before moving on to the solution of the difficulty in question which we see in the chapters that follow. That is why he says "You shall light my candle; Thou, O Lord my God, wilt enlighten my darkness." (Chapter 25).
Evo
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