[The Concept of Nature by Alfred North Whitehead]@TWC D-Link book
The Concept of Nature

CHAPTER II
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This relation of occupation is not usually stated for events but for objects.

For example, Pompey's statue would be said to occupy space, but not the event which was the assassination of Julius Caesar.

In this I think that ordinary usage is unfortunate, and I hold that the relations of events to space and to time are in all respects analogous.

But here I am intruding my own opinions which are to be discussed in subsequent lectures.

Thus the theory of absolute space requires that we are aware of two fundamental relations, the space-ordering relation, which holds between points, and the space-occupation relation between points of space and material objects.
[3] Cf.


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