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    A discrete, frame-by-frame account of position changes ca... — Carmelics
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    Supports→A staccato analysis of motion is sufficient to account for ordinary experience of movement

    A discrete, frame-by-frame account of position changes captures all empirically observable facts about motion

    Causation
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    In Aristotelian physics, continuous motion counts as a change requirin...77%The fact that an item occupies different positions at different times ...75%Self-motion occurs in physical cases, not only in psychology73%Time is the measure of motion with respect to the before and after73%

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    SEP: diodorus-cronus
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    Although he here denies that things move, Diodorus is not rejecting ordinary experience, as Zeno of Elea is generally held to have done. He concedes the empirical fact that things are in different places at different times, and therefore that an item can be said to ‘have moved’. What he denies is that motion could ever be taking place in the present. It may nevertheless be true that something has moved. The result, a staccato analysis of motion comparable to a series of film frames, is quite suf

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