Charles Explorer logo
🇬🇧

Social Time and Space

Class at Faculty of Education |
ON9312032

Annotation

The conceptualisation of time and space in the European tradition has its beginning in the Old Testament in the first Book of

Moses (Genesis) and is therefore the basis of all cultures that arise from Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam).

The construction of future as the third time dimension is developed only in the New Testament and can provide an explanation of the different social structure of societies that are built only on the Christian culture.

Time and space in the myths of native (non-European) nations are drawn according to the lifestyles of the nations ? resident or itinerating, and it is therefore possible to deduce on the occupation of the nations ? agriculture or pasturage. The analysis of symbols used in concrete myths can also help identify the nations, as symbols transfer imaginary phenomena to those comprehensible to all members of the given culture. Examples of a symbolic system of time and space are calendar, liturgical year, annual and family ceremoniousness, etc.