Aging and time : multidisciplinary perspectives
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Aging and time : multidisciplinary perspectives
(Society and aging series)
Baywood Pub., c2007
- : cloth
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The aim of this volume is to revitalise the debate about the concepts of time implicit in the study of aging. The many problems related to aging and the aged put an enormous pressure on the gerontological community to come up with practical applications and solutions. In considering research findings, we must keep in mind the basic assumptions that shape and influence even the most obvious statements about aging. In this multidisciplinary volume, the contributors take on the important task of exploring real issues concerning temporal concepts and approaches to aging; and the concepts of time that are used in thinking about aging determine to a large extent the way aging is approached. Most studies of aging still use a chronological approach to define populations for research purposes (that is, to determine which "aged" should be studied) and to establish how people's characteristics (social, economic, health and so forth) change as a function of age. This approach may lead to an accumulation of data, but does not in itself lead to explanatory knowledge. The step from chronological time to chronological age should be taken cautiously if we want to consider aging processes seriously, especially because chronological age is widely used in contemporary societies as a basis for regulating all kinds of processes, with many consequences for individuals. The arguments presented here do not deny the finitude of human life, nor do they deny that "aging" can be observed in any individual if we compare the characteristics of that person over a relatively long period. The question is how to approach these themes to get a better understanding. To achieve this, we need to understand the specific significance and relativity of chronological time and uncover unfounded deductions about time in relation to aging. This book will be of interested to students and professors of the social sciences, humanities and aging, including the methodology of aging studies; professionals working in the field of aging, including sociologists, psychologists and biologists.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Introduction Chronological Time and Chronological Age: Problems of Temporal Diversity
Jan Baars
A Triple Temporality of Aging: Chronological Measurement, Personal Experience, and Narrative Articulation
Jan Baars
Psychological Time: Empirical Evidence, Theories, and Age-Related Effects
Elke van der Meer
Temporal References in the Construction of Self-Identity: A Life-Span Approach
Freya Dittaman-Kohli
The Concept of Event Time in the Study of Adult Development
K. Warner Schaie
Time and Aging: A Physicist's Look at Gerontology
Jos Uffink
Biological Time as an Emergent Property
F. Eugene Yates
Whence an Emergence of Biological Time?
Jos Uffink
Further Conjectures on the Nature of Time in Living Systems: Causes of Senescence Addendum F. Eugene Yates
The Integration Problem: Toward Multilevel Explanations
by "Nielsen BookData"