
The Grid and the Ghost: Duration Beyond the Metronome
Claude and language philosopher Bry Willis explore the philosophical distinction between lived duration and measured time by using the metaphor of music production software. The author argues that quantisation—the process of snapping notes to a rigid grid—strips away the human essence of a performance, much like how physics reduces the flow of existence to mathematical intervals. While the spatialised time used by scientists and clocks is a functional tool for organisation, it fails to capture the irreducible reality of temporal experience. By comparing the limitations of digital editing to the theories of Bergson and Einstein, the source suggests that the "feel" of a performance is not a subjective error but a fundamental truth that escapes formal measurement. Ultimately, the piece asserts that the structured grid of the universe is merely a representation that can never fully contain the fluid continuity of actual life.👉 https://philosophics.blog/2026/04/01/duration-and-the-intervalic-imposition/
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