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Aging and Time: Multidisciplinary Perspectives by Jan Baars β€” book cover
Physiology, Aging Well & Rejuvenation, Aging - General & Miscellaneous, Gerontology

Aging and Time: Multidisciplinary Perspectives

by Jan Baars (Editor), Henk Visser
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Overview

The aim of this volume is to revitalize the debate about the concepts of time implicit in the study of aging. The many problems related to aging and the aged put an enormous pressure on the gerontological community to come up with practical applications and solutions. But in considering research findings, we must keep in mind the basic assumptions that shape and influence even the most obvious statements about aging. In this multidisciplinary volume, the contributors take on the important task of exploring real issues concerning temporal concepts and approaches to aging: the concepts of time that are used in thinking about aging determine to a large extent the way aging is approached. Most studies of aging still use a chronological approach to define populations for research purposes (that is, to determine which "aged" should be studied) and to establish how people's characteristics (social, economic, health, and so forth) change as a function of age. This approach may lead to an accumulation of data, but does not in itself lead to explanatory knowledge. The step from chronological time to chronological age should be taken cautiously if we want to consider aging processes seriously, especially because chronological age is widely used in contemporary societies as a basis for regulating all kinds of processes, with many consequences for individuals. The arguments presented here do not deny the finitude of human life, nor do they deny that "aging" can be observed in any individual if we compare the characteristics of that person over a relatively long period. The question is how to approach these themes to get a better understanding. To achieve this, we need to understand the specific significance and relativity of chronological time and uncover unfounded deductions about time in relation to aging.

Synopsis

The aim of this volume is to revitalize the debate about the concepts of time implicit in the study of aging. The many problems related to aging and the aged put an enormous pressure on the gerontological community to come up with practical applications and solutions. But in considering research findings, we must keep in mind the basic assumptions that shape and influence even the most obvious statements about aging. In this multidisciplinary volume, the contributors take on the important task of exploring real issues concerning temporal concepts and approaches to aging: the concepts of time that are used in thinking about aging determine to a large extent the way aging is approached.

Most studies of aging still use a chronological approach to define populations for research purposes (that is, to determine which "aged" should be studied) and to establish how people's characteristics (social, economic, health, and so forth) change as a function of age. This approach may lead to an accumulation of data, but does not in itself lead to explanatory knowledge. The step from chronological time to chronological age should be taken cautiously if we want to consider aging processes seriously, especially because chronological age is widely used in contemporary societies as a basis for regulating all kinds of processes, with many consequences for individuals. The arguments presented here do not deny the finitude of human life, nor do they deny that "aging" can be observed in any individual if we compare the characteristics of that person over a relatively long period. The question is how to approach these themes to get a better understanding. To achieve this, we need to understand the specific significance and relativity of chronological time and uncover unfounded deductions about time in relation to aging.

About the Author, Jan Baars

Jan Baars, Ph.D., studied sociology and philosophy in Amsterdam and is Professor of Interpretive Gerontology at the University for Humanist Studies in Utrecht and Professor of Philosophy of the Social Sciences and the Humanities at Tilburg University in the Netherlands. He has published and (co-)edited a dozen books and published many articles on philosophical and gerontological subjects, in English, German, French, Finnish, and Dutch. His main interests are the theoretical and practical presuppositions in approaches to aging, especially concepts of time and temporality. Dr. Baars has lectured at many universities in Europe and the United States and is co-editor of Aging, Globalization and Inequality: The New Critical Gerontology (Baywood, 2005).

Henk Visser, Ph.D., became Emeritus Professor at the University Maastricht in 2005. In his professional life he taught mathematics, analytic philosophy, philosophy of the information sciences, and philosophy of science. His systematic research focused on productive problem solving; his historical research concerned the development of scientific philosophy and scientific humanism. One of his more recent works is Het Forumwaarmerk van Wetenschap (The Forum Theory of Scientific Truth), written with the psychologist A. D. de Groot. Since 1998 Dr. Visser has been president of the Evert Willem Beth Foundation in Amsterdam.

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Book Details

Published
May 1, 2007
Publisher
Baywood Publishing Company, Incorporated
Pages
216
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780895033673

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