{"id":35111,"date":"2022-11-30T17:00:32","date_gmt":"2022-11-30T16:00:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/?p=35111"},"modified":"2022-11-30T11:44:05","modified_gmt":"2022-11-30T10:44:05","slug":"today-is-the-magical-cube","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/today-is-the-magical-cube\/","title":{"rendered":"Today is the Magical Cube"},"content":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"inline_featured_image":false,"footnotes":""},"project":[353,846],"project_type":[725,726,735,738],"class_list":["post-35111","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","project-online-publications","project-time-after-time","project_type-formats","project_type-text","project_type-spheres-of-practice","project_type-scientific"],"acf":{"bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","custom_color_css_variable":"","content_type":[{"acf_fc_layout":"content_img","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"img_gallery":false,"img":[35117],"img_gallery_format":""},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Mama, what is time?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Oh, dear, isn\u2019t it a bit too soon for this question?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> But doesn\u2019t \u00bbtoo soon\u00ab already imply a specific notion of time? If something is \u00bbtoo soon,\u00ab it means that we shouldn\u2019t be talking about this now, but will be talking about it at some point in the future. It means that things are attached to certain moments in time, as in a fixed order. Like crawling \u2026\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Like crawling? Do you mean that crawling has a specific order between knees and hands?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> No, I\u2019m saying that you are all the time encouraging me to crawl. And you told grandma the other day: Nico is almost crawling. And people are always saying: my baby is already crawling.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Yes, I guess you are right. Since children develop in more or less similar ways, we can sort of predict the order in which things happen when a child is growing. There are many studies about it. And although much of them are quite questionable, we still rely on them more than we admit.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Oh, I feel so claustrophobic! Like I am trapped in the future.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Poor baby! I guess the adult world is always expecting children to be something else, pushing you to do things as adults do.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Bingo. Watch out, next thing you know you are calling me \u00bbcute little man!\u00ab\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Oh, come on \u2026 Nico: But I understand that this may be quite inevitable for you since we babies are really growing. Now what do you say: if people can tell how I am going to develop, is this a way of remembering the future?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Well, to make it as simple as possible, we usually say that we remember the past, live in the present, and make plans or guesses for the future. But there are probably some ways of remembering the future, although they escape me right now. Nico: Oh, I\u2019m having a <em>d\u00e9ja vu<\/em> here \u2026 Or is it <em>v\u00faj\u00e1 de<\/em>?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue-extended\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue Extended';\">Cami:<\/span> Tricky. What if we think of time as a river? Let\u2019s say you are in the middle of it, looking towards the mouth. You have already traveled all the way from the springs. The past is the accumulation of your memories, or actually of all that you are. And as the river gets wider and wider, it accumulates more and more water.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Am I using water wings?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Yes, I\u2019m pretty sure you are. And you are constantly floating toward the future, which always starts from where you are and moves forward. But you can only know what you\u2019ve already seen, you don\u2019t know what\u2019s coming.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\"> Nico:<\/span> And why do I want to go there? Is there a playground or something?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Now that you are saying it, yes, the future could be some kind of playground, an imaginary realm of possibilities with which we play in our thoughts.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Ok, so I\u2019m in the middle of a large river, alone, floating endlessly toward an imaginary playground that I\u2019ll never reach.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Well \u2026 this is what we conventionally call the \u00bbarrow of time.\u00ab\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Oh, curious! I remember holding an arrow at aunt Luisa\u2019s house and you telling me to watch out, that I could hurt myself. Isn\u2019t an arrow a weapon?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Well, yes, maybe the arrow of time can be some sort of weapon \u2026 It has been imposed by the industrial West everywhere, erasing other conceptions of time.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Although it seems to describe something real, don\u2019t you agree?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Yay, we are finally having the \u00bbwhat\u2019s real\u00ab talk!\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Oh, please, not today! It\u2019s just that the arrow shouldn\u2019t be seen as the only way to describe time. Even among modern conceptions, there are ways of seeing time way differently from the clock time model, this linear and abstract sequencing of past, present, and future.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> And there\u2019s a danger of just denying linear time and ending up exoticizing extra-modern peoples, saying that they live in ahistoric, eternal, or static time, or else that they only rely on cyclical periodizations. But it is not because people do not describe their temporalities by means of the clock that they don\u2019t think of things as coming before or after one another.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> But wait, isn\u2019t clock time itself a cycle?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Isn\u2019t it? And all our calendars are based on cycles, and a lot of our daily talk is based on cyclical references, like days and nights, or else when we think of seasons. We do not need to deny the arrow of time to use other conceptions of time. But what we call clock time is often denying other temporalities, resonating with racist ideas of progress and civilization.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> No! \u00bbBoo to captain clock!\u00ab\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Ok, so we\u2019re quoting now. But I have to say again that it\u2019s not so simple.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> What do you mean? Down with the clocks! Can we rip that one apart and play with the little pieces?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue-extended\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue Extended';\">Cami and Eric:<\/span> Just don\u2019t stick them in your mouth!\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Things can get pretty complicated if we look at them closely. Physicists say that they can be quite sure about the direction of time for three reasons: first, that we remember the past, but don\u2019t remember the future (this is the psychological arrow of time); second, that everything in the universe tends to go from more organized to less organized, like the toys in your room (this is called the thermodynamic arrow of time); and third, because the universe is expanding, with all the galaxies and stars and planets getting further away from each other (this is called the cosmological arrow). Weirdly, some scientists have suggested that in the future time could start running backward, as the universe would begin to contract instead of expand. Then we would really remember the future.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Time would go backward? Would this mean that my room would get clean by itself?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Exactly. We wouldn\u2019t need to collect toys from the floor anymore. But now the physicists seem to concur that time will always flow in the same direction.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> This sounds way more boring than the first option."},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_img","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"img_gallery":false,"img":[35115],"img_gallery_format":""},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Yeah, right?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\"> Cami:<\/span> Not to mention the whole other universe of physicists who argue that time doesn\u2019t exist. But I guess we could leave that part for another talk.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Ok, because I think for us babies time flows backward.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> What do you mean?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> When I was born, I could not make much difference in what I saw or heard. And little by little things started to become more \u2026 bounded. As if the room was tidying itself. So maybe I am facing the other side then? Of the river, I mean. I\u2019m looking at the springs. Does it invert time?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Now the future would be coming in your direction, right? That\u2019s interesting. And the future would always rise from the springs, not as in a model of progress. The future is coming from the earth itself.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> And the bubbles and the little waves around my body are the present. Now the present is the playground!\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> But I have to say I glimpse a problem here. When the past just flows away from me, and I flow away from it, I\u2019m constantly letting go of my memories. This can, of course, be a good thing, but it can also serve as a pretty good excuse for colonialism\u2019s continuing erasure of its past and present violences.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Yes, and now that I\u2019m thinking about it, the future becomes too highlighted. When you have your eyes so focused on this source, on this spring of eternal future, it can draw the Future, with a capital F, the future of progress. This future, springing from the earth, becomes some kind of resource to be exploited.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Wasn\u2019t it Ailton Krenak who said that the future doesn\u2019t exist?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Yes, he was talking about how the idea of the future is convenient for capitalist, colonialist, extractivist powers. And how it is so closely related to the idea of progress. He says that the future is a promise, some kind of hope for a thing that is coming, but never comes.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> And I think he was talking about what changes, if you think of it as the immediate aftereffect of our actions and decisions. Then it doesn\u2019t exist beyond our actual doings, and hence it is also our present responsibility for the world.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Hum \u2026 Even though adults relate babies to the future all the time, maybe we babies don\u2019t really work with the idea of future ourselves.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Gotcha. See, this morning you were really excited about eating strawberries, but you got distracted three seconds later, before we even headed to the kitchen.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Time passes differently for you! No offense.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> None taken. But maybe we can say that time passes differently for everything that exists. Some physicists also think that this is a consequence of Einstein\u2019s relativity.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Are we talking about the guy with the tongue and funny hair?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Oh, you know who Einstein is.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> It\u2019s just that I thought you didn\u2019t!\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Ok. But it\u2019s mindblowing to think that one instant here would last more than eight years in a galaxy such as Proxima Centauri b, and even more if you invert it: what is our correspondent of one second in Proxima Centauri b? You kind of extend time to such small intervals that it kind of stops making sense.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Wow, speed it up! For me, it\u2019s like there are so many things happening between what you call now and what comes next ... You seem not to have such a hard time waiting for things, but for me it\u2019s just hell. What you call the future is usually so extended that it seems quite a random election of probabilities, colored by a handful of other interesting events.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> If things pass through you less quickly than they do for us, does it mean that the future is closer for you than it is for us? I mean, if we keep the point of view of our speed.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Gee whiz, I just said I might not have a sense of the future and you take the opportunity to shove it even closer to my nose. I mean, why would you need the future if you already have it, huh?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> All this reminds me of how the Aymara people locate time in space. The past is what stands ahead of you, the \u00bbfront time.\u00ab It is what stands before their eyes \u2013 and quite literally since the word used for \u00bbeyes\u00ab and \u00bbearlier\u00ab is the same. So the Aymara point to the front when talking about the \u00bbold times,\u00ab or the earlier generations, or even the \u00bbgentil timpu,\u00ab the times before the Spanish invasion. And accordingly \u00bba future day\u00ab is what stands on the back. The curious thing is that, while they use many different gestures to sign the past (in front) and the present (on the floor), their gestures are far less elaborate when they want to refer to the future.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> So it\u2019s like I am looking instead at the mouth of the river? But the springs are the future?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> So the future stands behind you and you cannot see it. Or maybe you just get some glimpses of it when you turn your head. But you are mostly looking at the past and playing with bubbles in the present.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> So the past is yet to come \u2013 yes, I\u2019m quoting that talk of Karen Barad now.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Anytime! But also, if you think about it, now the past is changing. You are constantly looking at the past, but the past is never the same. It\u2019s as if the past events continue to exist with their own futures, that can be different than the one you are living now.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> So it\u2019s not possible to step in the same past twice, huh? Adi\u00f3s, my good Heraclitus!\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> And now the future is coming toward your back. So all the random projections and possibilities of the future are slipping away, except for the particular ones that are actually touching your body, becoming bubbles and splashes. Right now. Around you.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Yes, especially if it rains!\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> Oh, yeah, the rain! The flux of the river changes with the conditions, more water, less water, evaporation, mist \u2026\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Would it be too much of a cosmological cake if I mentioned that for the Quechua the future is above and the past below?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> More of a pan-cake, I would say.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> Okay, but the mix becomes particularly interesting if you think about what Vine Deloria said about a spatially situated notion of history. History for the West occurs primarily on a temporal frame, even if that frame is metaphorized on a spatial surface like an arrow. Deloria contrasted it with his and other peoples\u2019 strongly spatial mode of thinking. Locations in native peoples\u2019 homelands have countless and multiple stories. And temporal knowlegdes are intrinsic to the landscapes, deeply specific, dealing with precise geographical formations, conditions, features, and rhythms.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> So we don\u2019t have to stay only in the river anymore. Time is all around. Everywhere you look there is history.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> But with different times at every location.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> And different pasts are still happening. So a new act in the present can change the past. Cami: Yes, the landscapes change, and I move through them, and make them while living through them. So if the past is not changing, I can turn to a different place. If what\u2019s inhabiting my view is a bad memory, if it makes my body heavy and sad, I can change my horizon. Walk to forget, say the Katxuyana.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Then you have it, huh?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Eric:<\/span> What?\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\"> Nico:<\/span> Your ending.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Cami:<\/span> I don\u2019t get it.\r\n\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Nico:<\/span> Because if it\u2019s too soon for me to crawl, it\u2019s even sooner to walk. And, well, if I don\u2019t walk, I can\u2019t forget. I see it all."},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<p class=\"is-size-6\"><span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\"><strong>Camila de Caux<\/strong> is a writer, ethnologist, and parent, working around notions of corporeality and multiple ontologies, and their reverberations in political practices. Since 2010, she works with the Arawet\u00e9 ethnic group in the Brazilian Amazon. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"is-size-6\"><span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\"><strong>Eric Macedo<\/strong> is a former Akademie Schloss Solitude fellow, anthropologist, and parent. His work deals with questions of difference and ethnocentrism, human-environment relations, colonialism and, more recently, with intersections between anthropology and science fiction. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"is-size-6\"><span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\"><strong>Nico<\/strong> is their child.<\/span><\/p>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","bgcolor":"has-bg-grey","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":8,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<p class=\"is-size-6\"><span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Inspirations and further readings<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"is-size-6\"><span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\"> Karen Barad, \u00bbTroubling Time\/s, Undoing the Future,\u00ab Conference at the Faculty of Arts of Aarhus Universitet, Denmark, 2016. Available at: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/ watch?v=dBnOJioYNHU\">https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/ watch?v=dBnOJioYNHU<\/a> <\/span>\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Vine Deloria Jr., <em>God is Red: A Native View of Religion<\/em>. Golden, Colorado: Fulcrum Publishing, 2003. <\/span>\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Martina Faller and Mario Cu\u00e9llar, \u00bbMet\u00e1foras del tiempo en el quechua,\u00ab Conference at the <em>IV Congreso Nacional de Investigaciones Ling\u00fc\u00edstico-Filol\u00f3gicas<\/em>. Universidad Ricardo Palma, Lima, 2003. <a href=\"http:\/\/personalpages.manchester.ac.uk\/staff\/ martina.t.faller\/documents\/Faller-Cu\u00e9llar.pdf\">http:\/\/personalpages.manchester.ac.uk\/staff\/ martina.t.faller\/documents\/Faller-Cu\u00e9llar.pdf<\/a><\/span>\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Jay Griffith, \u00bbBoo to captain clock,\u00ab in: <em>New Internationalist, 343 (March)<\/em>, 2002, pp. 14\u201317. Available at: <a href=\"https:\/\/newint.org\/features\/2002\/03\/05\/boo\">https:\/\/newint.org\/features\/2002\/03\/05\/boo<\/a><\/span>\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Stephen Hawking, <em>A Brief History of Time.<\/em> London: Bantam Books, 1989. <\/span>\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Ailton Krenak, \u00bbEarth\u2019s Fever,\u00ab Interview by Eric Macedo and Camila de Caux in: <em>a perfect storm<\/em>, 2022. Available at: <a href=\"https:\/\/aperfectstorm.net\/earths-fever\/\">https:\/\/aperfectstorm.net\/earths-fever\/<\/a> <\/span>\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">R.E. N\u00fa\u00f1ez and E. Sweetser, \u00bbWith the Future Behind Them: Convergent Evidence From Aymara Language and Gesture in the Crosslinguistic Comparison of Spatial Construals of Time,\u00ab in: <em>Cognitive Science<\/em>, 30, 2006, pp. 401-450. <a href=\"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1207\/ s15516709cog0000_62\">https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1207\/ s15516709cog0000_62<\/a> <\/span>\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Rasheedah Phillips (ed.), <em>Black Quantum Futurism: Theory and Practice, Vol. I<\/em>. The Afrofuturist Affair\/House of Future Sciences Books, 2012. <\/span>\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Carlo Rovelli, The Order of Time. New York: Riverhead Books, 2018. <\/span>\r\n<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Roy Wagner, Coyote Anthropology. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press, 2010.<\/span><\/p>"}]},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35111","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=35111"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35111\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=35111"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"project","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/project?post=35111"},{"taxonomy":"project_type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/project_type?post=35111"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}