Daily schedule
Seminars meet each weekday morning after breakfast.
After lunch, afternoons are free for individual study or exploring the many places of interest in and around the city. Optional plenary excursions and social activities including walking tours will also be available.
The course fee includes breakfasts Monday-Saturday (residential guests only), lunches Sunday-Friday, and three-course dinners Sunday-Thursday. All meals are taken in Christ Church’s spectacular dining hall.
On Friday, there will be a special four-course gala dinner to celebrate the closing of the week.
Seminars
Monday: Clocking Time
From the Palaeolithic age to the Postmodern, we consider the implications for daily life of the precise measurement and strict imposition of seconds, minutes, months and millennia. How has the inexorable drive toward technological accuracy and historiographical delineation shaped human society and affairs?
Tuesday: Time and Space
Einstein dismantled Newton’s intuitive model of absolute time, replacing it with ‘spacetime’, a startlingly counter-intuitive construction. We learn in detail about the great man’s theories and discover how even within our teaching room, time is advancing at differing speeds. And I’ll be explaining how we can visit the year 3026.
Wednesday: Time in the Mind
Why does time appear to drag when we are bored? And might we somehow prevent the years from whizzing by? Contrasting developments in neuroscience with a range of venerable metaphysical hypotheses (those of Aquinas and Husserl, for example), today’s class examines how humans strive to comprehend and control their personal experience of time.
Thursday: Time’s Arrow
Was there ‘time’ before the Big Bang? Why does time ‘flow’, and why only in one direction? And does time ‘stop’ inside a Black Hole? Quantum physics can supply some if not all of the answers and we’ll hear about these and other possible solutions to the intractable questions of determinism, infinity and The End.
Friday: Story Time
We uncover the earliest time-travel fiction, some dating from the Eighteenth Century and engage with the ever-growing body of writers inspired by the possibilities of temporal manipulation, among them H.G. Wells, Thoms Mann and John Wyndham. We also consider how in films such as La Jetée and Memento, cinema creatively challenges our perception of time.