Abstract
Historical time, which we take for granted as a basic common denominator in so much social, political and cultural practice, is a construction belonging to Renaissance and Reformation humanism, and one that is undergoing fundamental contemporary challenge across a broad cultural range from language to science. This article, building on the author's Realism and Consensus (1983) and Sequel to History (1992), and using material from different fields, notably physical science and political linguistics, explores ways of imagining a different construction of time and suggests some of the practical outcomes that such a cultural reformation portends.
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