
The Jellyfish and the Grid: Biological Duration vs Measured Time
Language philosopher Bry Willis and Claude use the reproductive habits of a specific jellyfish to distinguish between biological duration and the measured grids of time we impose on the world. While the creature possesses an autonomous internal rhythm of roughly twenty hours, this natural tempo is suppressed and synchronised by the external light-dark cycle of a twenty-four-hour day. The author argues that we often mistake these environmental and mathematical structures for the essence of time itself, forgetting the messy, fluid reality that exists beneath the metrics. Ultimately, the jellyfish serves as a philosophical metaphor for how organic processes unfold according to their own logic, existing as a primary reality that remains independent of human measurement.👉 https://philosophics.blog/2026/04/01/a-jellyfish-knows-more-about-time-than-your-physics-textbook/?utm_source=spotify&utm_medium=social
Altri episodi di "Philosophics — Philosophical and Political Ramblings"



Non perdere nemmeno un episodio di “Philosophics — Philosophical and Political Ramblings”. Iscriviti all'app gratuita GetPodcast.








