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  2. Liminal space (aesthetic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liminal_space_(aesthetic)

    A pillar of liminal spaces is the absence of living things, particularly other people, with the implication that the viewer is alone; this lack of presence is "liminal in a temporal way, that occupy a space between use and disuse, past and present, transitioning from one identity to another." [3]

  3. Liminality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liminality

    Liminality is a major theme in Offshore by Penelope Fitzgerald, in which the characters live between sea and land on docked boats, becoming liminal people. Saul Bellow's "varied uses of liminality...include his Dangling Man, suspended between civilian life and the armed forces" [63] at "the onset of the dangling days". [64]

  4. Multiple time dimensions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_time_dimensions

    Multiple independent timeframes, in which time passes at different rates, have long been a feature of stories. [15] Fantasy writers such as J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis have made use of these and other multiple time dimensions, such as those proposed by Dunne, in some of their most well-known stories. [15]

  5. Closed timelike curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closed_timelike_curve

    Additionally, every space location has a future time, implying that an object may stay at any location in space indefinitely. Any single point on such a diagram is known as an event . Separate events are considered to be timewise separated if they differ along the time axis, or spacewise separated if they differ along the space axis.

  6. Perdurantism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perdurantism

    It is a fusion of all the perdurant's instantaneous time slices compiled and blended into a complete mereological whole. Perdurantism posits that temporal parts alone are what ultimately change. Katherine Hawley in How Things Persist states that change is "the possession of different properties by different temporal parts of an object". [2]

  7. Time–space compression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time–space_compression

    Time–space compression occurs as a result of technological innovations driven by the global expansion of capital that condense or elide spatial and temporal distances, including technologies of communication (telegraph, telephones, fax machines, Internet) and travel (rail, cars, trains, jets), driven by the need to overcome spatial barriers ...

  8. Temporality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temporality

    Temporal turn social science investigates different understandings of time at different times and locations, giving rise to concepts such as timespace where time and space are thought together. [ 6 ] See also

  9. Spacetime diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spacetime_diagram

    A spacetime diagram is a graphical illustration of locations in space at various times, especially in the special theory of relativity.Spacetime diagrams can show the geometry underlying phenomena like time dilation and length contraction without mathematical equations.