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7/26/2019 An Experiment With Time - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/an-experiment-with-time-wikipedia-the-free-encyclopedia 1/5 Author J. W. Dunne Country United Kingdom Language English Publisher A. & C. Black Faber & Faber Publication date 1927 Pages 208pp ISBN 1-57174-234-4 OCLC 46396413 (https://www.worldcat.org /oclc/46396413) LC Class MLCM 2004/02936 (B)  An Experiment with Time n Experiment with Time From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia n Experiment with Time is a book by the British aeronautical engineer J. W. Dunne (1875–1949) on the subjects of precognitive dreams and a theory of time which he called Serialism. First published in March 1927, it was widely read and his ideas were explored by several other authors, especially by J. B. Priestley. He published three sequels; The Serial Universe, The New Immortality, and Nothing Dies. Contents 1 Contents 2 Description 2.1 Overview 2.2 Dreams and the experiment 2.3 The Theory of Serialism 3 Relation to other metaphysical systems 4 Scientific reception 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Contents I. Definitions II. The Puzzle III. The Experiment IV. Temporal Endurance and Temporal Flow V. Serial Time VI. Replies to Critics (later editions only) Appendix to the third edition: I. A Note by Sir Arthur Eddington II. The Age Factor III. The New Experiment Index Description Experiment with Time - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_Experiment_with_Time#In_ f 5 5/11/16, 6

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Page 1: An Experiment With Time - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

7/26/2019 An Experiment With Time - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/an-experiment-with-time-wikipedia-the-free-encyclopedia 1/5

Author J. W. Dunne

Country United Kingdom

Language English

Publisher A. & C. Black

Faber & Faber

Publication

date

1927

Pages 208pp

ISBN 1-57174-234-4

OCLC 46396413 (https://www.worldcat.org

/oclc/46396413)

LC Class MLCM 2004/02936 (B)

 An Experiment with Time

n Experiment with TimeFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

n Experiment with Time is a book by the British

aeronautical engineer J. W. Dunne (1875–1949) on the

subjects of precognitive dreams and a theory of time

which he called Serialism. First published in March 1927,it was widely read and his ideas were explored by several

other authors, especially by J. B. Priestley. He published

three sequels; The Serial Universe, The New Immortality,

and Nothing Dies.

Contents

1 Contents

2 Description2.1 Overview

2.2 Dreams and the experiment

2.3 The Theory of Serialism

3 Relation to other metaphysical systems

4 Scientific reception

5 In popular culture

6 See also

7 References

8 External links

Contents

I. Definitions

II. The Puzzle

III. The Experiment

IV. Temporal Endurance and Temporal Flow

V. Serial Time

VI. Replies to Critics (later editions only)

Appendix to the third edition:

I. A Note by Sir Arthur Eddington

II. The Age Factor

III. The New Experiment

Index

Description

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Overview

The first part of the book describes many precognitive dreams, most of which Dunne himself had

experienced.

The second part of the book sets out a theory to try and explain them. This is, simply put, that all moments

in time are present together. Anyone could see their own birth, life and death in the same instant, were it not

for the human consciousness, which focuses attention on a "now" which travels through time at a fixed rate.

This means there are different kinds of "time": one kind is just one direction in the four-dimensional

landscape of spacetime, as fixed as a map, while another kind of time is needed to explain the moment of 

"now" which travels across the map in the direction of map-time and which we experience.

Dunne believes that these multiple kinds of time lead to a complete rethink of the way that we understand

both time and consciousness.

According to Dunne, whilst wakeful attention prevents us from seeing outside of the part of time we are

"meant" to look at, whilst we are dreaming we have the ability to recall all of our timeline without the

restriction of focused attention. This allows fragments of our future to appear in pre-cognitive dreams. Otherconsequences include the phenomenon known as Deja vu and the existence of life after death.[1]

Dreams and the experiment

The main part of the book begins with anecdotal accounts of precognitive dreams which Dunne had

experienced. These included several major disasters; a volcanic eruption in Martinique, a factory fire in

Paris, and the derailing of the Flying Scotsman express train from the embankment approaching the Forth

Railway Bridge in Scotland.

Dunne tells how he sought to make sense of these dreams, coming to the conclusion that they were events

from his own future, such as reading a newspaper account of a disaster, which were intruding into hisdreams. In order to try and prove this to his satisfaction, he then developed the experiment which gives the

book its title. He wrote down details of his dreams on waking and then later went back and compared them

to subsequent events. He also persuaded some friends to try the same experiment. [1]

The Theory of Serialism

Having presented Dunne's evidence for precognition, the book moves on to a possible theory in explanation

which he called Serialism.[2]

The theory harks back to an experience with his nurse when he was nine years old. Already thinking about

the problem, the boy asked her if Time was the moments like yesterday, today and tomorrow, or was it the

travelling between them that we experience? Any answer was beyond her, but the observation formed the

basis of Serialism. The theory resolves the issue by proposing a higher dimension of Time (say, t 2), in which

our consciousness experiences its travelling along its timeline along t 1 within the fixed spacetime landscape

described by general relativity. But Dunne found that his logic led to a similar difficulty with t 2, leading to

an even higher t 3, and so on in the infinite regress which gives the theory its name.

Accompanying these levels of time are levels of the observer's conscious self. Dunne suggested that when

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we die, it is only our immediate selves in t 1 which die and that our higher selves are outside of mundane

time and therefore effectively immortal.[1]

Relation to other metaphysical systems

Dunne's theory of time has parallels in many other scientific and metaphysical theories. The Aboriginal

people of Australia, for example, believe that the Dreamtime exists simultaneously in the present, past andfuture, and that this is the objective truth of time, linear time being a creation of human consciousness and

therefore subjective. Kabbalah, Taoism and indeed most mystical traditions have always posited that waking

consciousness allows awareness of reality and time in only a limited way and that it is in the sleeping state

that the mind can go free into the multi-dimensional reality of time and space (examples: "Dreams are the

wandering of the spirit through all nine heavens and nine earths," The Secret of the Golden Flower, trans.

Richard Wilhelm). Similarly, all mystery traditions speak of the immortal and temporal selves which exist

simultaneously both within time and space and without.

Dunne wrote a book just before his death which revealed that he believed himself to be a spiritual medium.

He had deliberately chosen to leave this out of An Experiment with Time as he judged that it would have

affected the scientific reception of his theory.[3] The partially-revised manuscript was completed by hisfamily and published after his death under the title Intrusions?.

Scientific reception

In 1928, Sir Arthur Eddington wrote a letter to Dunne, a portion of which was reprinted in the 1929 and

later editions of An Experiment With Time, in which he said:

“I agree with you about 'serialism'; the 'going on of time' is not in Minkowski's world as it

stands. My own feeling is that the 'becoming' is really there in the physical world, but is not

formulated in the description of it in classical physics (and is, in fact, useless to a scheme of laws which is fully deterministic).   ”

Some psychical researchers such as George N. M. Tyrrell and C. D. Broad have suggested that there are

problems with Dunne's theory of time. As Tyrrell explained:

“Mr. J. W. Dunne, in his book, An Experiment with Time, introduces a multidimensional

scheme in an attempt to explain precognition and he has further developed this scheme in

later publications. But, as Professor Broad has shown, these unlimited dimensions are

unnecessary, ... and the true problem of time—the problem of becoming, or the passage of 

events from future through present to past, is not explained by them but is still left on the

author's hands at the end.[4] ”

In a review for the New Scientist John Gribbin described An Experiment with Time as a "definitive

classic".[5] Paul Davies in his book About Time: Einstein's Unfinished Revolution (2006) wrote that Dunne

was an entertaining writer but there is no scientific evidence for more than one time and that Dunne's

argument seems ad hoc.[6]

In his book Is There Life After Death? (2006), British writer Anthony Peake wrote that some of Dunne's

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ideas are valid and attempts to update the ideas of Dunne in the light of the latest theories of quantum

physics, neurology and consciousness studies.[7]

In popular culture

Dunne's theory became well known and many authors have referenced him and his ideas in numerous

literary works. He "undoubtedly helped to form something of the imaginative climate of those [interwar]

years".[8][9]

One of the first and most significant writers was J. B. Priestley, who based three of his "Time plays" around

them: Time and the Conways, Dangerous Corner and An Inspector Calls.[8]

The ideas of Dunne also form the basis for "The Dark Tower" a short story by C. S. Lewis, and the

unpublished novel, "The Notion Club Papers" by J. R. R. Tolkien. Both Tolkien and Lewis were members of 

the Inklings, and Tolkien also used Dunne's ideas about parallel time dimensions in developing the

relationship between time in Middle Earth and "Lórien time".[10]

Other important contemporary writes who used his ideas included John Buchan (The Gap in the Curtain),James Hilton ( Random Harvest ), his old friend H. G. Wells (The Queer Story of Brownlow’s Newspaper and

The Shape of Things to Come), and Rumer Godden ( A Fugue in Time).[8][11]

Following Dunne's death in 1949, the popularity of his themes continued. Philippa Pearce's childhood

fantasy Tom's Midnight Garden makes use of Dunne's ideas and includes a brief discussion of them.[12]

See also

Dreamtime

Modal realismP. D. Ouspensky

References

Priestley, J.B. Man and Time, Aldus 1964 (reprinted Bloomsbury 1989).1.Dunne, J.W. An Experiment with Time, First Edition, A.C. Black, 1927, Page 163.2.Ruth Brandon Scientists and the supernormal New Scientist 16 June 1983 p. 7863.G.N.M. Tyrrell; Science and psychical phenomena 1938, p. 135.4.John Gribbin Book Review of An Experiment with Time New Scientist 27 Aug 1981, p. 5485.Paul Davies About Time: Einstein's Unfinished Revolution (http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=mOgIGyD1uSIC&pg=PT303&dq=paul+davies+%22experiment+with+time%22&hl=en&

sa=X&ei=TJYMT9-TA9aqsgaEtdmdBA&ved=0CDEQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false)

6.

Anthony Peake Is There Life After Death? The Extraordinary Science Of What Happens When We Die 20067.Stewart, V.; "J. W. Dunne and literary culture in the 1930s and 1940s",  Literature and History, Volume 17,Number 2, Autumn 2008, pp. 62-81, Manchester University Press.

8.

Anon,; "Obituary: Mr. J. W. Dunne, Philosopher and Airman", The Times, August 27 1949, Page 7.9.Flieger, V. A Question of Time; JRR Tolien's Road to Faerie, Kent State University Press, 1997.10.Victoria Stewart; "An Experiment with Narrative? Rumer Godden's A Fugue in Time", in (ed. Lucy Le-Guilcherand Phyllis B. Lassner) Rumer Godden: International and Intermodern Storyteller, Routledge, 2010, pp. 81-93.

11.

"Authors : Pearce, Philippa : SFE : Science Fiction Encyclopedia". www.sf-encyclopedia.com. Retrieved2016-01-15.

12.

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External links

JW Dunne: dreaming the future (https://dunnefuture.wordpress.com/about/) research blog.

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