Discussing Time: Last-This-Next
Mood:
irritated
Topic: Musings
I going to explore a troubling fault, as I see it, associated with discussing future plans. Troubling because it causes confusion and and continuous disagreement. Unbelievably it one of the unresolved debarkles of English Language Usage that has not been difinitively addressed.
For the most part as we live from moment to moment, our experience of time is always the present moment. Experientially we are unable to move within time beyond the Present. Although we may be able to recall and 'relive' elements of the Past, it is not the same as the experiential moment, the recollection is not the 'now' in full, of that moment.
We are also able to project into the Future, and for some things make reasonably accurate predictions of what may come to pass, but again no matter how close those predictions may be they are not the same as the acutal future 'Now' that occurs. Be that as it may, this has not stopped us from developing a dialogue and mechanism for talking about the future or the past. However, our dialogue for discussing future plans is fundamentally flawed.
It is flawed because there is no direct agreement on what the terms, "This Wednesday" and "Next Wednesday" actually refers to. The flaw is essentially an issue of Reletivity - Einstein at work
As outlined above we experience the present, (This) remember the past (Last) and predict the future (Next). In essence then time for us is linear. We track this linear nature of time with a Calendar. We divide time into seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, month, and years. So Time as we perceive it is like a queue and our experiential 'Now' is positioned somewhere in that queue.
The interesting part is that for everyone within our awareness of 'Now' is also in the Time queue at exactly the same time moment. It follows then that we all share the same agreement about Time, how it is measured, tracked, and how we express our concept of it. Otherwise we cannot have the same expeience or awareness of each other. We would simply not meaningfully exist to each other. (Yes, there is an entirely different discussion and argument around this conclusion, but lets just take it as given for the purose of the current discussion.)
So our Primary reference point for any discussion of future events is based on our expiriential now and where that is in the time queue.
In any queue, the "Next" item is the directly after the current item. e.g. I have a line of seven jelly babies: red, yellow, pink, green, orange, purple, and blue. I am 'Now' eating the red jelly baby; the 'Next Jellybaby' is the yellow one. I am eating 'this Jellybaby' (the red one) and I am going to eat 'this jellybaby' next (the purple one).
Here we introduce the concept of item classification and group names. This concept is important and integral to our problems relating to discussion regarding Next and This. We are also introducing the concept of a pointer to identify specific objects where the pointer can jump the queue. This is fine where we can randomly sampl physical object or even abstract concepts however, we experience time in a linear fashion asnd as such cannot randomly sample the time queue - we are not Galifreyan Timelords
If I repeat the sequence of jellybabies then I have a new problem, how to refer to the same colour jelly baby in the second sequence? I have to name each repeat sequence, e.g. group 1, group 2, etc.
Timewise, for the point of this discussion, we have days, weeks, months, and years.
Today, Tomorrow,and Yesterday. There is no next Today, next tomorrow, or Next Yesterday. As funny as this sounds, there is also no this Today, this tomorrow, or this Yesterday, either; or, Last Today, Last Tomorrow, or last Yesterday. The reason for this is that Today, Tomorrow and Yesterday are shifting concepts rather than Proper names like the days of the week. (Hang on, I know, week is also one of these, we'll get to it.)
Days of the Week: Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday. (We could also start on Monday too... its not important.) A Week refers to a group of seven days. Like the jellybabies above if we repeat the group sequentially after the first group (Week 1) we have another week (Week 2), if we do this again we have three weeks (Week 3).
Lets place our experiential 'Now' at the middle day of the middle week, from the list above, the middle day would be Wednesday.
So, Last, This, Next: What? Now we have to select a descriptor or group name. Let's take the group Name Week. We are experientially at the middle day of the middle week of our, short, three week, Time Queue as outlined above.
From this relative position, "Last Week" refers to Week 1, or the last 'group of 7 days' (week) in the queue, relative to our present position in the time queue.
Similarly, "Next Week" refers to Week 3 or the next 'group of 7 days' (week) in the queue, relative to our present position in the time queue.
Finally, "This Week" refers to the current group for seven days (week) relative to our present position in the time queue. That is the three days preceeding our position, because our 'Now' has been placed at the middle day of the week for this discussion; and, the following three days which together complete this present group of seven days.
What's important to realise about this wek, is that it does not matter which day of the seven is our present (Today) day, because we are refering to the specific group of seven days that make up this current Week.
This is all really unproblematic, but needs to be defined BECAUSE when we start talking about days in different weeks IS when we start having communicaitons issues and is the point over which many people don't agree and convention has not difinitively established.
So, our present relative position in the time queue item, DAY - of which there are seven discrete and distinctly named days. Our present 'Now' (Today) is Wednesday.
Thus, "Last Tuesday" the last occurence of a Tuesday in the time queue which was "Yesterday." Similarly, "Next Thursday" is the very next occurence of a thursday in the timequeue which is "Tomorrow." Finally, it follows then (pedantically? controvertially?) that "This Wednsday" (Today) refers to the current occurrence of a Wednesday in the time queue BUT by convention 'This' is relative only to the time queue item WEEK. i.e. This Wednesday is the very next (future) occurence of a Wednesday within the current, 'This' week. Thus 'This Wednesday' can refer to either a future or past Wednesday but only within the present week. Herein lies all the controversy over This and Next... (and Last)
The controversy exists because while Next, Last and This are similar terms they are not used in the same way. We can say, this second, this minute, this day, this week, this month, this year, but, this day has become archaic in use, i.e. it is redundant and has been replaced by Today. Next and Last are queue markersand specifically refer to the next or last occurence of a specific day, week, month, or year IN RELATION TO the CURRENT point of 'NOW' in the time queue.
So, now, today, is Wednesday. This Wednesday is meaningless as it is today. Next Wednesday, is the next occurrence of a Wednesday in the time queue, which is the Wednesday of Next Week.
It follows that Next Friday is the is the next occurrence of a Friday in the time queue, which is the Friday of This Week. Thus This Friday and Next Friday are the same day.
Now, Last Wednesday was the last, most recently passed, occurrence of a Wednesday in the time queue, which is the Wednesday of last week. It follows that Last Monday is the last occurrence of a Monday in the time queue which iwas the Monday of this week. Thus Last Monday and This Monday are also the same day. By convention though we tend to say, This Monday passed.
Where is the controversy in all of this? It occurs when we refer to a future day. Say it is Wednesday and you want to set up a meeting for Tuesday of next week. This Tuesday has already passed so we might say, "Lets meet next Tuesday."
Some people consider Next Tuesday to always be the Tuesday after This Tuesday, and define This Tuesday as refering (erroneously) to the next occurence of a Tuesday in the time queue, and Next Tuesday to be the one that follows that. The problem with this is that the Tuesday of this week needs to then be refered to as, "This week, Tuesday" or "This week, Tuesday passed" for clarrity, which 9 times out of 10 doesn't happen. Its cumbersom communication.
Others consider Next Tuesday always to be the Tuesday of Next Week, and Last Tuesday as the Tuesday of Last Week. This creates similar problems with refering to the Tuesday of this current week.
Why is it so? Why is this unresolved? Why can we not agree on logical, pedantic, specific, or clear rules for the usage of these terms in this context? I think it comes back to the redundancy issue. That of understanding and accepting that Today, Wednesday, is also This Wednesday, that last Tuesday was Yesterday and Tomorrow is Next Thursday. Accepting that days are sequential and cyclic and that our reference point shift dynamically relative to DAY or WEEK. Dynamic Systems are harder to understand and people, bless them can't be bothered to think that hard.
JM2CW.