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(2013) Axiomathes 23 (4).

Do expectations have time span?

Miguel Garcia-Valdecasas

pp. 665-681

If it is possible to think that human life is temporal as a whole, and we can make sense of Wittgenstein's claim that the psychological phenomena called "dispositions' do not have genuine temporal duration on the basis of a distinction between dispositions and other mental processes, we need a compelling account of how time applies to these dispositions. I undertake this here by examining the concept of expectation, a disposition with a clear nexus to time by the temporal point at which the expectation is satisfied. However, it seems that we cannot always identify the beginning of an expectation, and in a few cases, its end. If so, the reduction of expectations to neural events or accompanying feelings which spread over time in the usual way seems a hard enterprise, because these processes, much as other physical processes, have a definite and largely measurable time span. Only at a higher level, that is, as part of human life, expectation can be said to be temporal.

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Garcia-Valdecasas, M. (2013). Do expectations have time span?. Axiomathes 23 (4), pp. 665-681.

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