Distinctive · only 17% of schools agree
(35/202)
Is environmental damage ever truly permanent?
Extinction is forever; soil erosion takes centuries to repair; the carbon we emit will warm the climate for millennia. But whether 'forever' or 'millennia' means what they say depends on what kind of process the universe is.
Loss is part of cycles; what disappears returns in another form.
On cyclical views, what is lost in one phase of the cycle reappears in another. The forest cleared today is the forest that grows back centuries hence; the species extinct now is the niche occupied by a successor species over geological time. Loss is real …
Roads not taken
Damage is real and permanent on the relevant timescales. There is no recovery; there is only limitation. (66%) ·
From the standpoint of the One, the categories of permanence and loss are conventional. (8%) ·
What appears irreversible is reversible by the right action. (5%)
Distinctive · only 17% of schools agree
(35/202)
Can a civilization recover from collapse?
Rome fell; Maya cities emptied; Bronze Age trade networks collapsed in a single generation. Whether what was lost can be recovered — or whether collapse is structurally final — depends on what kind of process civilization is.
Civilization rises and falls in cycles; recovery is structural to history.
On cyclical views, the pattern of rise and fall is itself the structure of historical time. What appears as catastrophic loss in one phase is the condition for emergence in the next. Specific configurations are not preserved across cycles, but the underlying pattern that supports …
Roads not taken
Civilizational complexity is hard to build and easy to lose; recovery is at best partial. (66%) ·
From the One's vantage, civilizational categories are themselves conventional. (8%) ·
Civilization is the kind of order that can in principle be restored. (5%)
Distinctive · only 17% of schools agree
(35/202)
Does the second law of thermodynamics mean something morally?
The universe trends from order to disorder. Whether that physical pattern carries moral weight — making the preservation of order, beauty, complexity a kind of cosmic duty — depends on whether time has the kind of structure morality could lean on.
Local entropy increase is part of a cycle; the moral category is participation in the cycle.
On cyclical views, the second law describes a phase of the cycle, not the whole of time. What looks like irreversible decay in one phase is the precondition for emergence in the next. The moral category is less 'work against entropy' and more 'participate well …
Roads not taken
Entropy is what time is. The moral weight, if any, is the weight of working against the current. (66%) ·
From the One's vantage, the second law is itself a feature of the conventional, not the ultimate. (8%) ·
Apparent entropy is reversible in principle; the moral category is restoration. (5%)
Distinctive · only 17% of schools agree
(35/202)
Could causation work backwards?
If the laws of physics are time-symmetric, what makes causes precede their effects? And if the asymmetry isn't metaphysical, could retroactive causation be coherent?
Time is structured as return; 'forward' and 'backward' are local features of the cycle.
On cyclical views, time is not a straight arrow but a structure of return. What appears as forward causation in one phase is part of the larger cycle in which past and future continuously give onto each other. Retrocausation as ordinarily conceived doesn't arise; the …
Roads not taken
Causation runs one way — the arrow of time is real and structural. (68%) ·
From the One's vantage, causation itself is a conventional category. (8%) ·
Past, present, and future are conventional designations; the question doesn't quite arise. (2%)
Distinctive · only 17% of schools agree
(35/202)
Is the asymmetry between memory and anticipation a real feature of time, or just of us?
You remember the past but anticipate the future. Whether that asymmetry tracks something deep about time, or just something contingent about how minds happen to be wired, depends on what direction time has.
Memory and anticipation are phases of a cycle that visits both directions.
On cyclical views, what is past and what is future are local features of a cycle that contains both. The asymmetry between memory and anticipation is real within a phase but doesn't reflect a global direction. The contemplative practices that report perception of cycles often …
Roads not taken
The asymmetry is real because time itself has a real direction. (68%) ·
From the One's vantage, memory and anticipation are themselves conventional. (8%) ·
The categories of memory and anticipation are conventional; their asymmetry is what we built. (2%)