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cbabe

(4,155 posts)
Thu Nov 23, 2023, 10:47 AM Nov 2023

Why the future might not be where you think it is

https://theconversation.com/why-the-future-might-not-be-where-you-think-it-is-216861

Why the future might not be where you think it is

Published: November 13, 2023 11.25am EST
Ruth Ogden, Liverpool John Moores University

Imagine the future. Where is it for you? Do you see yourself striding towards it? Perhaps it’s behind you. Maybe it’s even above you.



How you answer these questions will depend on who you are and where you come from. The way we picture the future is influenced by the culture we grow up in and the languages we are exposed to.



Analysis of how people write, speak and gesture about time suggests that the Aymara are not alone. Speakers of Darij, an Arabic dialect spoken in Morocco, also appear to imagine the past as in front and the future behind. As do some Vietnamese speakers.

The future doesn’t always have to be behind or in front of us. There is evidence that some Mandarin speakers represent the future as down and the past as up. These differences suggest that there is no universal location for the past, present and future. Instead, people construct these representations based on their upbringing and surroundings.



In cultures that stress the importance of progress, change and modernisation, the future is normally in front – for example, the UK and the US. However, in cultures that place a high value on tradition and ancestral history, such as in Morocco and indigenous groups such as the Māori, the past is the focus and is therefore usually in front. These differences may also have implications for initiatives to tackle global challenges. If the future is not always in front, then western campaign mantras about “moving forward”, “moving on” and “leaving the past behind” may lack resonance for many people.

…more…


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Why the future might not be where you think it is (Original Post) cbabe Nov 2023 OP
I picture time as a line -- past, is on the left. Future is on the right. 3Hotdogs Nov 2023 #1
I picture a spiral. n/t ariadne0614 Nov 2023 #2

3Hotdogs

(13,394 posts)
1. I picture time as a line -- past, is on the left. Future is on the right.
Thu Nov 23, 2023, 10:55 AM
Nov 2023

That probably comes from linear depictions in some of the history textbooks in school.

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