『THE ONTOLOGY OF TIME - ALEXIS KARPOUZOS』のカバーアート

THE ONTOLOGY OF TIME - ALEXIS KARPOUZOS

THE ONTOLOGY OF TIME - ALEXIS KARPOUZOS

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2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

*]:pointer-events-auto scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" data-turn-id= "request-694d082d-6a58-832a-905a-dbd4ec5ef901-3" data-testid= "conversation-turn-136" data-scroll-anchor="true" data-turn= "assistant"> In this episode, we attempt to approach one of the most radical concepts of contemporary thought: "timeless time," as developed by Alexis Karpouzos. This is neither an abstract metaphysical idea nor a poetic metaphor, but a profound reconfiguration of how we understand time, existence, and the self. Timeless time is not eternity, nor an endless linear duration. It is a rupture with linearity, a movement beyond "before" and "after," beyond cause and effect as fixed sequences. It invites us to think of the world not as a chain of events, but as a field of continuous transformation, where everything unfolds within an invisible rhythm that does not pass, but modulates. Time, in this sense, is not something we move through—it is something that moves through us. Within this perspective, life and death cease to be opposites. They are not two separate states that follow one another, but two expressions of the same unfolding. Every moment carries within it both emergence and dissolution, presence and withdrawal. What we call "beginning" and "end" are not absolute points, but ways in which consciousness organizes the flux in order to make it graspable. Beneath this organization, the rhythm remains indivisible. This leads us to a deeper insight: that the divisions we experience—between past and future, self and other, order and chaos—are not primary features of reality, but secondary articulations produced by perception. Before these distinctions arise, there is no fragmentation, no separation—only a dynamic continuity without fixed identity. Even after distinctions emerge, this deeper continuity is never lost; it simply becomes invisible to a consciousness that has learned to think in opposites. Alexis Karpouzos invites us to move beyond this dualistic habit of thought. Not by denying distinctions, but by seeing through them—by recognizing that every opposition is a temporary stabilization within a deeper, non-dual field. In this sense, timeless time is not outside the world, but immanent within every experience, silently sustaining the movement of becoming. This has profound implications for how we understand ourselves. The self is no longer a fixed identity moving through time, but a transient configuration within this rhythmic field. Memory, anticipation, intention—all the structures that seem to define us—are revealed as patterns within a flow that exceeds them. To encounter timeless time is therefore not to gain control over life, but to relinquish the illusion that control was ever possible. And yet, this is not a loss—it is a transformation. When time is no longer experienced as a linear progression toward an end, anxiety about the future and attachment to the past begin to loosen. What emerges is not passivity, but a different kind of attention: a presence attuned to the unfolding of each moment without the need to fix it. This episode does not aim to explain timeless time in a definitive way—because such a concept resists final definition. Instead, it opens a space of inquiry. What if time is not something that carries us toward death, but a field in which life and death are continuously intertwined? What if meaning does not lie at the end of a process, but within the very movement of transformation itself? To think timeless time is to enter a different relation to existence—one that is less about arriving, and more about participating. A relation in which the question is no longer "Where am I going?" but "What is unfolding here?" And perhaps, in that shift, something fundamental changes: not the world itself, but the way it becomes visible to us.
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