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%T Passing the Time in Pastimes, Professionalism and Politics
%A Knights, David
%J Time & Society
%N 2-3
%P 251-274
%V 15
%D 2006
%K ethics; power/knowledge; representation; subjectivity; securing the self in social identity;
%= 2011-03-01T03:47:00Z
%~ http://www.peerproject.eu/
%> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-223266
%X This article may be seen as in search of time but with no ‘real’                prospect of finding it since it is believed that time reflects and reinforces the                relations in which it is embedded. The article will focus on pastimes,                professionalism, and politics, arguing that while these diverse activities would                appear to have no more than their alliteration in common, they share a similar                orientation to time that is informed by a phenomenological consciousness of                intentionality. This involves a linear sense of time as representing the gap that                can only be bridged by intentions being realized instrumentally in specific results                through means-end chains. Time then becomes filled up with activities that leave                little space for reflection. This raises some issues regarding time that, outside of                philosophy and even there only occasionally, would not ordinarily be aired. Some of                these issues will be ethical, epistemological and methodological. The ethics will be                drawn through an examination of Levinas’s misgivings about the                phenomenology of Heidegger, the epistemology and methodology from some deliberations                on time in relation to Foucault’s discourse on epistemic regimes, and                methodology as one possible implication of those deliberations.
%G en
%9 journal article
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info