Time and Free Will: An Essay on the Immediate Data of Consciousness
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About This Book
The work analyzes consciousness by distinguishing lived duration from the abstract, measurable time of science, arguing that inner life unfolds as a qualitative, indivisible flow that intellect habitually spatializes and fragments. It examines how sensations, memories, and efforts resist simple quantitative comparison, critiques attempts to reduce intensity to extensity, and challenges mechanistic accounts of causation when applied to mental phenomena. Emphasizing intuition as the method suited to grasping duration, the argument culminates in a reconception of freedom as grounded in the continuous, creative character of consciousness rather than in deterministic chains describable by external measurement.
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