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While in the popular mind, '''eternity''' often simply means existing for an [[infinite]], i.e., limitless, amount of [[time]], many have used it to refer to a timeless existence altogether '''outside of time'''.  There are a number of [[arguments for eternity]], by which proponents of the concept, principally [[Aristotle]], purported to prove that matter, motion, and time must have existed eternally.   
 
While in the popular mind, '''eternity''' often simply means existing for an [[infinite]], i.e., limitless, amount of [[time]], many have used it to refer to a timeless existence altogether '''outside of time'''.  There are a number of [[arguments for eternity]], by which proponents of the concept, principally [[Aristotle]], purported to prove that matter, motion, and time must have existed eternally.   
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[[Augustine of Hippo]] wrote that time exists only within the created universe, so that God exists outside of time; for [[God]] there is no past or future, but only an eternal present.  One need not believe in God in order to hold this concept of eternity: for example, an atheist mathematician can maintain the philosophical tenet that numbers and the relationships among them exist outside of time, and so are in that sense eternal.
 
[[Augustine of Hippo]] wrote that time exists only within the created universe, so that God exists outside of time; for [[God]] there is no past or future, but only an eternal present.  One need not believe in God in order to hold this concept of eternity: for example, an atheist mathematician can maintain the philosophical tenet that numbers and the relationships among them exist outside of time, and so are in that sense eternal.
 
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[[Near-death experience]] testimonies typically speak of eternity as a timeless existence by stating that portions of experiences in the eternal world lasted, say, "an hour or a month, I don't know.  There was no time."
[[Near-death experience]] testimonies typically speak of eternity as a timeless existence by stating that portions of experiences in the eternal world lasted, say, "an hour or a month, I don't know.  There was no time."{{Who|date=July 2007}}
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<center>For lessons on the [[topic]] of '''''Eternity''''', follow [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Eternity this link].</center>
 
   
Another facet of eternity is that it is permanent in some aspects. Supposing we are in a state of eternity; a [[person]] could not break a [[pencil]] in two, or walk from a place to another since those actions have a before and an after: a [[time]] in which the pencil was whole and a time in which it no longer was. These changes correspond to time. Basically nothing can happen in eternity in the sense we understand it. In order for actions to happen, there must be a tense that corresponds to a continuing action: a tense in which past, present, and future are combined to form a continual action. One doesn't break the pencil, but one broke the pencil, breaks the pencil, and will break the pencil all at the same instant.
 
Another facet of eternity is that it is permanent in some aspects. Supposing we are in a state of eternity; a [[person]] could not break a [[pencil]] in two, or walk from a place to another since those actions have a before and an after: a [[time]] in which the pencil was whole and a time in which it no longer was. These changes correspond to time. Basically nothing can happen in eternity in the sense we understand it. In order for actions to happen, there must be a tense that corresponds to a continuing action: a tense in which past, present, and future are combined to form a continual action. One doesn't break the pencil, but one broke the pencil, breaks the pencil, and will break the pencil all at the same instant.
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There is a folk story where a wise shepherd boy is brought to a king to answer three questions. The third question he is asked to answer is "How many seconds are in eternity?" The boy responds by telling the king there is a mountain that is one hour deep, one hour long, and one hour wide. It is comprised entirely of diamond and every century a little bird comes to sharpen its beak on the mountain. The boy tells the king that when the mountain is entirely worn down one second of eternity will have passed.
 
There is a folk story where a wise shepherd boy is brought to a king to answer three questions. The third question he is asked to answer is "How many seconds are in eternity?" The boy responds by telling the king there is a mountain that is one hour deep, one hour long, and one hour wide. It is comprised entirely of diamond and every century a little bird comes to sharpen its beak on the mountain. The boy tells the king that when the mountain is entirely worn down one second of eternity will have passed.
 
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==Quote==
== See also ==
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The ''progression of eternity'' does not consist solely in [[spiritual]] development. [[Intellectual]] acquisition is also a part of universal [[education]]. The [[experience]] of the mind is broadened equally with the expansion of the spiritual horizon. Mind and [[spirit]] are afforded like opportunities for training and advancement.[http://mercy.urantia.org/cgi-bin/webglimpse/mfs/usr/local/www/data/papers?link=http://mercy.urantia.org/papers/paper37.html&file=/usr/local/www/data/papers/paper37.html&line=122#mfs]
* [[Presentism]]
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* [[Teleology]]
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* [[Perennial philosophy]]
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* [[Eternalist]]
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The progression of eternity does not consist solely in [[spiritual]] development. [[Intellectual]] acquisition is also a part of universal [[education]]. The [[experience]] of the mind is broadened equally with the expansion of the spiritual horizon. Mind and [[spirit]] are afforded like opportunities for training and advancement.[http://mercy.urantia.org/cgi-bin/webglimpse/mfs/usr/local/www/data/papers?link=http://mercy.urantia.org/papers/paper37.html&file=/usr/local/www/data/papers/paper37.html&line=122#mfs]
      
[[Category: General Reference]]
 
[[Category: General Reference]]
 
[[Category: Philosophy]]
 
[[Category: Philosophy]]

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