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  1. Aug 28, 2000 · The perceived order of different positions need not necessarily be the same as the actual temporal order of those positions, but it will be the same as the causal order of the perceptions of them. Since causes always precede their effects, the temporal order perceived entails a corresponding temporal order in the perceptions. Dainton (2001) has ...

  2. Aug 21, 2019 · In order to prove their non-classicality, we formulate a Bell-type theorem for temporal order: We define a task that cannot be accomplished if the time order between the events was predetermined ...

  3. Mar 24, 2022 · However, if simultaneity or temporal order processing were assessed more indirectly, then the temporal window of integration and temporal order threshold might be even shorter 29,33.

  4. Feb 14, 2024 · Chronological Order: Temporal precedence implies that there is a clear temporal sequence between two events, denoting that one occurs before the other. This ordering assists in establishing cause-effect relationships and enables the understanding of causal connections. Causality: Temporal precedence is closely linked to the concept of causality. It suggests that in a cause-and-effect ...

  5. May 3, 2019 · The temporal ordering must be a complete ordering, rather than a partial ordering. Temporal orderings are complete orderings because they are opinionated (in the sense that the value of X is settled either temporally before, temporally after, or at the same time as the value of Y).

  6. Differences in order produce “narrative anachronies” such as prolepsis (the anticipation of an event that will take place later in the story) and analepsis (the reference to an event that has taken place earlier). 2 Through such interruptions of chronology, Genette suggests, we discover “narrative’s capacity for temporal autonomy ...

  7. This temporal order does not necessarily indicate predictability of the cause by the effect. A definition suggested by the famous mathematician, Norbert Wiener (and previously discussed by Bunge [1963] and doubtless other philosophers) is the idea that I extended and made specific in Granger [1969] and [1980].There are two requirements:

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