Time Talks cover art

Time Talks

Preview
Free with 30-day trial
Prime logo New to Audible Prime Member exclusive:
2 credits with free trial
1 credit a month to use on any title to download and keep
Listen to anything from the Plus Catalogue—thousands of Audible Originals, podcasts and audiobooks
Download titles to your library and listen offline
₹199.00 per month after 30-day trial. Cancel anytime.

Time Talks

Written by: Tenzin Trepp
Narrated by: Sarah Jason, David Harris
Free with 30-day trial

₹199.00 per month after 30-day trial. Cancel anytime.

Buy Now for ₹842.13

Buy Now for ₹842.13

This is a series of discussions on Existential Realism — a framework that rethinks time, existence, and reality from the ground up.

At its core is a simple distinction:

The present alone exists — but the past and future are still real.

The past persists as traces, constraints, and records.

The future exists as structured possibilities, tendencies, and open directions.

This series develops that idea across multiple domains.

We examine why the block universe fails to account for becoming, how quantum physics may favor a present-centered ontology, and why relativity does not eliminate the present but reshapes it into a relative structure.

We move through entropy, causality, and the emergence of time — into biology, where organisms live in bounded temporal horizons, and into cognition, where time is both constructed and constrained.

We explore ethics grounded in the present, the role of agency in an open world, and formal logic systems that model these distinctions precisely.

Along the way, we confront competing views — presentism, eternalism, and various hybrid theories — not by dismissing them, but by placing them within a shared logical and conceptual space.

This is not a single argument, but a cumulative framework.

Each episode adds a piece: from physics to phenomenology, from formal logic to lived experience — all centered on one claim:

Reality is not a frozen totality, but an unfolding structure in which the present is the only point of existence.

Metaphysics Philosophy Science
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
No reviews yet