Social Scientist. v 17, no. 190-91 (March 1989) p. 91.


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DEFINITION OF SPACE AND TIME 91

'mysteries' of the homogeneity of radiation by giving up the fetishism ofth^ light cone and taking into account new possible physical processes.

CONCLUSION

In the cognition of space and time the ascendance from»the abstract to the concrete should include recognising that space and time derive from material processes with their contradictory aspects of reversibility and irreversibility. It would also include the recognition of the dissimilarity between space and time. Further, technically speaking, it should be recognised that the separation of space like vectors and time like vectors is to be made not on the basis of an absolutized light cone, but with the help of a wider process cone which includes along with light all material processes that may conceivably be used as signals.

Only through such an ascendance from the abstract to the concrete in the conception of space and time can we resolve the seemingly intractable problems that plague the general theory of relativity.

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