Time and space are often taken for granted as universal frameworks: time flows linearly, space stretches uniformly, and events unfold within these fixed arenas. Relational ontology challenges this assumption, proposing instead that time, space, and the phenomena within them are emergent, perspectival, and inseparable from the systems that instantiate them.
This series, Relational Cuts: Time, Space, and the Emergence of Phenomena, explores how relational cuts — acts of actualisation that trace difference within a system — give rise to temporal horizons, spatial configurations, causal patterns, and meaningful phenomena. Each post builds on the last, progressively reframing classical notions of reality through the lens of relational emergence.
What to Expect in the Series
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Rethinking Time and SpaceAn introduction to the relational perspective, showing why time and space are not independent containers but co-actualised through relational cuts.
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Time as Relational HorizonExamines how temporal horizons emerge from system-specific instantiations, shaping sequence, rhythm, and duration.
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Space as Emergent ConstrualExplores how spatial configurations arise from relational distinctions and co-actualise with temporal horizons.
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The Interdependence of Time and SpaceShows how temporal and spatial dimensions are inseparable, co-emerging in every act of system actualisation.
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Relational Causality and Temporal LogicReframes causality and sequence as perspectival, emergent patterns rather than linear chains unfolding in pre-existing spacetime.
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Phenomena, Meaning, and Spatiotemporal EmbodimentConnects relationally emergent time and space to meaning, perception, and the embodied experience of phenomena.
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Beyond Classical Notions: Toward a Relational Mythos of Space and TimeReflects on the philosophical and cultural implications, proposing new metaphors and a relational mythos for understanding reality.
This series invites readers to reconceive the familiar dimensions of existence not as static frameworks but as emergent, dynamic patterns arising from relational systems. By the end, the ordinary notions of “time,” “space,” and “cause” are transformed into tools for tracing the rich interplay of phenomena, meaning, and perspectival horizons — a foundation for a relational mythos of possibility.
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