Relations (1)

related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts

The concepts of self and time are linked as fundamental components of human experience and consciousness, as evidenced by their joint alteration during hallucinogenic states [1], their shared requirement for semantic structures to be understood [2], their co-occurrence in philosophical inquiries regarding personal identity [3], and their role as core elements in the phenomenal structure of experience [4].

Facts (4)

Sources
Dualism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Winter 2016 Edition) plato.stanford.edu Howard Robinson · Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimHoward Robinson authored 'Personal identity, self and time', published in 'Mind: its Place in the World. Non-reductionist Approaches to the Ontology of Consciousness' edited by A. Batthany in 2006.
Hallucinogens | Springer Nature Link link.springer.com Springer 1 fact
claimHallucinogens produce changes in mood and affect, and can alter the perception of time, space, and self in ways that typically occur only during dreaming or religious exaltation.
(PDF) Language and Consciousness; How Language Implies Self ... academia.edu Academia.edu 1 fact
claimThe authors of the 2017 paper in 'Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric' argue that concepts such as self, identity, time, place, causality, and purpose cannot be coherently imagined or known without non-definitional alphabets, symbols, and semantic structures.
Consciousness (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2025 ... plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimImmanuel Kant (1787), Edmund Husserl (1913), and subsequent phenomenologists demonstrated that the phenomenal structure of experience is intentional and includes complex representations of time, space, cause, body, self, and the world.