Tyranny of Time
On a
damp and cloudy afternoon on February 15, 1894, a man walked through Greenwich
Park in East London. His name was Martial Bourdin — French, 26 years of age,
with slicked-back dark hair and a mustache. He wandered up the zigzagged path
that led to the Royal Observatory, which just 10 years earlier had been
established as the symbolic and scientific center of globally standardized
clock time — Greenwich Mean Time — as well as the British Empire. In his left
hand, Bourdin carried a bomb: a brown paper bag containing a metal case full of
explosives. As he got closer to his target, he primed it with a bottle of
sulfuric acid. But then, as he stood facing the Observatory, it exploded in his
hands.
The
detonation was sharp enough to get the attention of two workers inside. Rushing
out, they saw a park warden and some schoolboys running towards a crouched
figure on the ground. Bourdin was moaning and screaming, his legs were
shattered, one arm was blown off and there was a hole in his stomach. He said
nothing about his identity or his motives as he was carried to a nearby
hospital, where he died 30 minutes later.
Nobody
knows for sure what Bourdin was trying to do that day. An investigation showed
that he was closely linked to anarchist groups. Numerous theories circulated:
that he was testing the bomb in the park for a future attack on a public place
or was delivering it to someone else. But because he had primed the device and
was walking the zigzagged path, many people — including the Home Office
explosives expert, Vivian Dering Majendie, and the novelist Joseph Conrad, who
loosely based his book “The Secret Agent” on the event — suspected that Bourdin
had wanted to attack the Observatory.
Bourdin,
so the story goes, was trying to bomb clock time, as a symbolic revolutionary
act or under a naive pretense that it may actually disrupt the global
measurement of time. He wasn’t the only one to attack clocks during this
period: In Paris, rebels simultaneously destroyed public clocks across the
city, and in Bombay, the famous Crawford Market clock was shattered with
gunfire by protesters.
Around
the world, people were angry about time.
The
destruction of clocks seems outlandish now. Contemporary society is obsessed
with time — it is the most used noun in the English language. Since clocks with
dials and hands first appeared on church towers and town halls, we have been
bringing them closer towards us: into our workplaces and schools, our homes,
onto our wrists and finally into the phone, laptop and television screens that
we stare at for hours each day.
We
discipline our lives by the time on the clock. Our working lives and wages are
determined by it, and often our “free time” is rigidly managed by it too.
Broadly speaking, even our bodily functions are regulated by the clock: We
usually eat our meals at appropriate clock times as opposed to whenever we are
hungry, go to sleep at appropriate clock times as opposed to whenever we are
tired and attribute more significance to the arresting tones of a clock alarm
than the apparent rising of the sun at the center of our solar system. The fact
that there is a strange shame in eating lunch before noon is a testament to the
ways in which we have internalized the logic of the clock. We are “time
binding” animals, as the American economist and social theorist Jeremy Rifkin
put it in his 1987 book, “Time Wars.” “All of our perceptions of self and world
are mediated by the way we imagine, explain, use and implement time.”
“The
clock does not measure time; it produces it.”
During
the COVID-19 pandemic, many people reported that their experience of time had
become warped and weird. Being trapped at home or laboring unusually excessive
hours made days feel like hours and hours like minutes, while some months felt
endless and others passed almost without notice. It seemed the time in our
clocks and the time in our minds had drifted apart.
Academic
studies explored how our emotions (such as pandemic-induced grief and anxiety)
could be distorting our perception of time. Or maybe it was just because we
weren’t moving around and experiencing much change. After all, time is change,
as Aristotle thought — what is changeless is timeless. But rarely did the clock
itself come into question — the very thing we use to measure time, the drumbeat
against which we defined “weird” distortions. The clock continued to log its
rigid seconds, minutes and hours, utterly unaware of the global crisis that was
taking place. It was stable, correct, neutral and absolute.
But what
makes us wrong and the clock right? “For most people, the last class they had
devoted to clocks and time was early in primary school,” Kevin Birth, a
professor of anthropology at the City University of New York who has been
studying clocks for more than 30 years, told me recently. “There’s this thing
that is central to our entire society, that’s built into all of our
electronics. And we’re wandering around with an early primary school level of
knowledge about it.”
Birth is
one of a growing chorus of philosophers, social scientists, authors and artists
who, for various reasons, are arguing that we need to urgently reassess our
relationship with the clock. The clock, they say, does not measure time; it
produces it. “Coordinated time is a mathematical construct, not the measure of
a specific phenomenon,” Birth wrote in his book “Objects of Time.” That
mathematical construct has been shaped over centuries by science, yes, but also
power, religion, capitalism and colonialism. The clock is extremely useful as a
social tool that helps us coordinate ourselves around the things we care about,
but it is also deeply politically charged. And like anything political, it
benefits some, marginalizes others and blinds us from a true understanding of
what is really going on.
The more
we synchronize ourselves with the time in clocks, the more we fall out of sync
with our own bodies and the world around us. Borrowing a term from the
environmentalist Bill McKibben, Michelle Bastian, a senior lecturer at
Edinburgh University and editor of the academic journal Time & Society, has
argued that clocks have made us “fatally confused” about the nature of time. In
the natural world, the movement of “hours” or “weeks” do not matter. Thus the
build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, the sudden extinction of
species that have lived on Earth for millions of years, the rapid spread of
viruses, the pollution of our soil and water — the true impact of all of this
is beyond our realm of understanding because of our devotion to a scale of time
and activity relevant to nothing except humans.
During
an era in which social constructs like race, gender and sexuality are being
challenged and dismantled, the true nature of clock time has somehow escaped
the attention of wider society. Much like has happened with money, the clock
has come to be seen as the thing it was only supposed to represent: The clock
has become time itself.
---------
Clock
time is not what most people think it is. It is not a transparent reflection of
some sort of true and absolute time that scientists are monitoring. It was
created, and it is frequently altered and adjusted to fit social and political
purposes. Daylight savings, for instance, is an arbitrary thing we made up. So
is the seven-day week. “People tend to think that somewhere there is some
master clock, like the rod of platinum in the Bureau of Weights and Measures,
that is the ‘uber clock,’” Birth told me. “There isn’t. It’s calculated. There
is no clock on Earth that gives the correct time.”
What’s
usually taught in Western schools is that the time in our clocks (and by
extension, our calendars) is determined by the rotation of the Earth, and thus
the movement of the sun across our sky. The Earth, we learn, completes an orbit
of the sun in 365 days, which determines the length of our year, and it rotates
on its axis once every 24 hours, which determines our day. Thus an hour is 1/24
of this rotation, a minute is 1/60 of an hour and a second is 1/60 of a minute.
None of
this is true. The Earth is not a perfect sphere with perfect movement; it’s a
lumpy round mass that is squashed at both poles and wobbles. It does not rotate
in exactly 24 hours each day or orbit the sun in exactly 365 days each year. It
just kinda does. Perfection is a manmade concept; nature is irregular.
For
thousands of years, most human societies have accepted and moved in harmony
with the irregular rhythms of nature, using the sun, moon and stars to
understand the passage of time. One of the most common early timekeeping
devices, sundials (or shadow clocks) reflected this: The hours of the day were
not of fixed 60-minute lengths, but variable. Hours were longer or shorter as
they waxed and waned in accordance with the Earth’s orbit, making the days feel
shorter in the winter and longer in the summer. These clocks didn’t determine
the hours, minutes and seconds themselves, they simply mirrored their
surrounding environment and told you where you were within the cyclical rhythms
of nature.
But
since the 14th century, we’ve gradually been turning our backs on nature and
increasingly calculating our sense of time via manmade devices. It began in the
monasteries of Northern and Central Europe, where pious monks built crude iron
objects that unreliably but automatically struck intervals to help bellringers
keep track of canonical hours of prayer. Like any machine, the logic of the
mechanical clock was based upon regularity, the rigid ticking of an escapement.
It brought with it a whole different way to view time, not as a rhythm
determined by a combination of various observed natural phenomena, but as a
homogenous series of perfectly identical intervals provided by one source.
The
religious fervor for rationing time and disciplining one’s life around it led
the American historian Lewis Mumford to describe the Benedictine monks as
“perhaps the original founders of modern capitalism.” It is one of the great
ironies of Christianity that it set the wheels in motion for an ever-unfolding
mania of scientific accuracy and precision around timekeeping that would
eventually secularize time in the West and divorce God, the original
clockmaker, from the picture entirely.
By 1656,
the Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens had invented the first pendulum clock,
which delivered homogenous and regular slices of a small unit of time: seconds.
Unlike the inconsistent mechanical clocks of before, the clock time of
pendulums was nearly perfect. That same century, the British astronomer John
Flamsteed and others developed “mean time,” an average calculation of the
Earth’s rotation. Science had found a way around the Earth’s wobbly
eccentricities, producing a quantifiable and consistent unit that became known
as Greenwich Mean Time.
Standardized
time became vital for seafarers and irresistible to corporate interests, such
was the ease it could offer trade, transport and electric communication. But it
took longer to colonize the minds of the general public. During the British
“railway mania” of the 1840s, around 6,000 miles of railway lines were
constructed across the country. Investors (including Charles Darwin, John Stuart
Mill and the Brontë sisters) climbed over each other to acquire rail company
shares in a frenzy of freewheeling capitalism that caused one of the biggest
economic bubbles in British history. Companies like Great Western Railway and
Midland Railway began to enforce Greenwich Mean Time inside their stations and
on their trains to make timetables run efficiently.
Every
city, town and village in Britain used to set its clocks to its own local solar
time, which gave each locale a palpable sense of identity, time and place. If
you lived in Newcastle, noon was when the sun was highest, no matter what the
time in London was. But as the railways brought standardized timetables, local
times were demonized and swept aside. By 1855, nearly all public clocks were set
to GMT, or “London time,” and the country became one time zone.
The
rebellious city of Bristol was one of the last to agree to standardized time:
The main town clock on the Corn Exchange building kept a third hand to denote
“Bristol time” for the local population who refused to adjust. It remains there
to this day.
“Railway
time” arrived in America too, splitting the country into four distinct time
zones and causing protests to flare nationwide. The Boston Evening Transcript
demanded, “Let us keep our own noon,” and The Cincinnati Commercial Gazette
wrote, “Let the people of Cincinnati stick to the truth as it is written by the
sun, moon and stars.”
The 1884
International Meridian Conference is often framed as the moment clock time took
over the world. The globe was sliced into 24 time zones declaring different
clock times, all synchronized to the time of the most powerful empire, the
British and their GMT. Nobody would decipher time from nature anymore — they
would be told what time it was by a central authority. The author Clark Blaise
has argued that once this was implemented, “It didn’t matter what the sun
proclaimed at all. ‘Natural time’ was dead.”
In
reality, this process had already been taking place throughout the 1800s as a
result of European colonialism, imperialism and oppression. Colonialism was not
just a conquest of land, and therefore space, but also a conquest of time. From
South Asia to Africa to Oceania, imperialists assaulted alternative forms of
timekeeping. They saw any region without European-style clocks, watches and
church bells as a land without time.
“European
global expansion in commerce, transport and communication was paralleled by,
and premised upon, control over the manner in which societies abroad related to
time,” the Australian historian Giordano Nanni wrote in his book, “The
Colonization of Time.” “The project to incorporate the globe within a matrix of
hours, minutes and seconds demands recognition as one of the most significant
manifestations of Europe’s universalizing will.” In short, if the East India
Company was the physical embodiment of British colonialism overseas, GMT was
the metaphysical embodiment.
The
Western separation of clock time from the rhythms of nature helped imperialists
establish superiority over other cultures. When British colonizers swept into
southeastern Australia in search of gold, they depicted the timekeeping
practices of the indigenous societies they encountered as irregular and
unpredictable in contrast to the rational and linear nature of the clock. This
was despite the fact that indigenous societies in the region had advanced forms
of timekeeping based on the moon, stars, rains, the blossoming of certain trees
and shrubs and the flowing of tides, which they used to determine the availability
of food and resources, distance and calendar dates.
“Nineteenth-century
Europeans generally conceived of such closeness to nature as calling into
question the very humanity of those who practiced it,” Nanni wrote. “This was
partly determined by the fact that Enlightenment values and ideals had come to
associate the idea of ‘humanness’ with man’s transcendence and domination over
nature; and its corresponding opposite — savagery — as a mode of life that
existed ‘closer to nature.’”
In
Melbourne, churches and railway stations grew quickly on the horizon, bringing
with them the hands, faces, bells and general cacophony of clock time. By 1861,
a time ball was installed in the Williamstown lighthouse and Melbourne was
officially synchronized to Greenwich Mean Time. British colonizers attempted to
integrate indigenous peoples into their labor force with unsatisfactory results
due to their unwillingness to sacrifice their own form of timekeeping. They did
not believe in “meaningless toil” and “obedience to the clock,” wrote the
Australian sociologist Mike Donaldson. “To them, time was not a tyrant.”
In some
parts of Australia, the indigenous resistance to Western clock time continued
defiantly. In 1977, in the tiny town of Pukatja (then known as Ernabella) a giant,
revolving, electronically operated clock was constructed near the town center
for the local Pitjantjatjara people to coordinate their lives around. A decade
later, a white construction worker at a town council meeting noted that the
clock had been broken for months. Nobody had noticed, because nobody looked at
it.
The
movement toward standardized time reached its apex in the 1950s, when atomic
clocks were judged to be better timekeepers than the Earth itself. The second,
as a unit of time, was redefined not as a fraction of the Earth’s orbit around
the sun, but as a specific number of oscillations of cesium atoms inside an
atomic clock.
“When
you look at precision timekeeping, it’s all about insulating and isolating
these clocks from responding to anything that goes on around them,” Bastian
told me via a video call from her home in Edinburgh. A poster with the words “A
clock that falls asleep” hung on the wall behind her. “You have to keep them
separate from temperature, fluctuations, humidity, even quantum gravity
effects. They can’t respond to anything.”
Over 400
atomic clocks in laboratories around the world count time using the atomic
second as their standard. A weighted average of these times is used to create
International Atomic Time, which forms the basis of Coordinated Universal Time
(UTC). UTC isn’t completely non-responsive. Every few years, a leap second is
added to it to keep it reasonably close to the rotations of the Earth. But in
2023, at the World Radiocommunication Conference, nations from around the world
will discuss whether it is in our best interest to abolish leap seconds and
permanently unmoor ourselves from the sun and moon in favor of time we
manufacture ourselves.
-----------
“It’s
easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism,” wrote the
literary critic Fredric Jameson. One of the hardest elements to imagine is what
capitalism has done to our perception of time via clocks. It now seems embedded
into our very psychology to view time as a commodity that can be spent or
wasted.
Capitalism
did not create clock time or vice versa, but the scientific and religious
division of time into identical units established a useful infrastructure for
capitalism to coordinate the exploitation and conversion of bodies, labor and
goods into value. Clock time, the British sociologist Barbara Adam has argued,
connected time to money. “Time could become commodified, compressed and
controlled,” she wrote in her book “Time.” “These economic practices could then
be globalized and imposed as the norm the world over.”
Clock
time, Adam goes on, is often “taken to be not only our natural experience of
time” but “the ethical measure of our very existence.” Even the most natural of
processes now must be expressed in clock time in order for them to be
validated.
Women in
particular often find themselves at the wrong end of this arbitrary metric.
Unpaid labor such as housework and childcare — which still disproportionately
burdens women — seems to slip between the measurements of the clock, whereas
the experience of pregnancy is very much under the scrutiny of clock time. Adam
quotes a woman’s account of her birth-giving experience: “The woman in labor,
forced by the intensity of the contractions to turn all her attention to them,
loses her ordinary, intimate contact with clock time.” But in the hospital
environment, where the natural process of childbirth has been evaluated and
standardized in clock-time units, a woman is pressured to follow what Alys
Einion-Waller, a professor of midwifery at Swansea University, has called a
“medicalized birth script.”
The
firsthand experience and intuition of the woman giving birth is devalued in
favor of timings and measurements related to the expected length of labor
stages, the spacing of contractions, the progress of cervical dilation and
other observations. Language such as “failure to progress” is common when a
woman doesn’t perform to the expected curve, and diversion from the clock-time
framework can be used to justify medical intervention. This is one of the
reasons that the home-birthing movement has recently grown in popularity.
Likewise,
new parents know that the baby itself becomes their clock, and any semblance of
standardized time is preposterous. But in time, of course, the baby joins the
rigid temporal hierarchy of school, with non-negotiable class and meal times,
forcing biological rhythms to adhere to socially acceptable clock time.
As Birth
put it to me: “The clock helps us with things that are uniform in duration. But
anything that is not uniform, anything that varies, the clock screws up. … When
you try to schedule a natural process, nature doesn’t cooperate.”
--------
In 2002,
scientists watched in amazement as Larsen B, an ice shelf on the Antarctic
peninsula 55 times bigger than Manhattan — which had been stable for 10,000
years — splintered and collapsed into hundreds of shards the size of
skyscrapers. A glaciologist who flew overhead told Scientific American that he
could see whales swimming in water where ice a thousand feet thick had been
just days earlier.
Virtually
overnight, previous clock-time predictions around the mass loss of ice needed
to be rewritten to acknowledge a 300% acceleration in the rate of change. In
2017, a piece of the nearby Larsen C ice shelf fell off, creating the world’s
biggest iceberg — so big that maps had to be redrawn. The Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change calls such abrupt events, which happen more often than
you might think, “surprises.”
The
climate crisis is a realm in which linear clock time frequently and fatally
misfires. It frames the crisis as something that is measurable, quantifiable
and predictable — something we can envisage in the same way as work hours,
holidays, chores and projects. Warming temperatures, ocean acidification, ice
melting and carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere are constantly being
translated into clock time to create tipping points, thresholds, roadmaps and
sustainable development goals for us to beat or aspire to. When a “surprise”
happens, time estimates crumble in the face of reality. Nature doesn’t
cooperate.
It works
the same way for putting limits on the amount of time we have to stop global
warming. The Guardian launched a blog called “100 months to save the world” in
July 2008 that used scientific research and predictions to make it “possible to
estimate the length of time it will take to reach a tipping point.” That was
154 months ago. Are we 54 months into the end of the world? Perhaps. But one
can’t help but wonder if the constant framing of the climate crisis in clock
time deadlines, which then pass without comment, has contributed to the
inability and inertia of many to comprehend the seriousness of what is actually
happening.
“We can’t say that clock time isn’t
important,” Vijay Kolinjivadi, a researcher at the University of Antwerp’s
Institute of Development Policy, told me. “There’s certain times when that
metric makes a lot of sense, and we should use it. For instance, you and I
decided to talk at 10 a.m. There’s no way to escape that. But when we are
thinking about capitalism, social crisis and ecological breakdown, it gets
problematic.” Clock time, he went on, “is always geared towards production,
growth and all the things that created this ecological crisis in the first
place.”
One of
the most affecting myths of clock time is that we all experience time at the
same steady pace. We don’t. “The future is already here,” the science-fiction
author William Gibson famously said in 2003, “it’s just not very evenly
distributed.” And framing the climate crisis as a ticking clock with only a
certain amount of time “to avoid disaster” ignores those for whom disaster has
already arrived. The reality is that it’s a privilege to live by clock time
alone and ignore nature’s urgent temporalities.
Every
few years, the American Midwest is ravaged by floods as the Missouri River
swells from intense rainfall, upending the lives of millions. When the floods
came during the summer of 1993, a New York Times journalist interviewed a
resident about the night he was evacuated. “He remembers everything about the
night the river forced him and his wife out of the house where they had lived
for 27 years — except for this. ‘I can’t tell you what day it was. … All I can
tell you is that the river stage was 26 [feet] when we left.’” The headline of
the article was, “They Measure Time by Feet.”
-------------
In 1992,
the astrophysicist turned author Alan Lightman published a novel called
“Einstein’s Dreams” in which he fictionalizes a young Albert Einstein dreaming
about the multitude of ways that different interpretations of time would play
out in the lives of those around him. In one dream, Einstein sees a world where
time is not measured — there are “no clocks, no calendars, no definite
appointments. Events are triggered by other events, not by time. A house is
begun when stone and lumber arrive at the building site. The stone quarry
delivers stone when the quarryman needs money. … Trains leave the station at
the Bahnhofplatz when the cars are filled with passengers.” In another, time is
measured, but by “the rhythms of drowsiness and sleep, the recurrence of
hunger, the menstrual cycles of women, the duration of loneliness.”
Recently,
there have been many attempts in both art and literature to reimagine the clock
and the role it plays in our lives. At the end of 2020, the artist David
Horvitz exhibited a selection of clocks he had created, which included one that
was synchronized to a heartbeat. Another artist, Scott Thrift, has developed a
clock called “Today,” which simplifies the passage of time into dawn, noon,
dusk and midnight as opposed to seconds, minutes and hours. It moves at half
the speed of a regular clock, making one full rotation in a day.
Bastian
herself has proposed clocks that are more responsive to the temporalities of
the climate crisis, like a clock synchronized with the population levels of
endangered sea turtles, an animal that has lived in the Pacific for 150 million
years but now faces extinction due to temperature changes. These and other
proposals all have the same idea at their core: There are more ways to arrange
and synchronize ourselves with the world around us than the abstract clock time
we hold so dear.
Clock
time may have colonized the planet, but it did not completely destroy alternative
traditions of timekeeping. Certain religions maintain a connection to time that
is rooted in nature, like salat in Islam and zmanim in Judaism, in which prayer
times are defined by natural phenomena like dawn, dusk and the positioning of
stars. The timing of these events may be converted into clock time, but they
are not determined by clocks.
In
places where globally standardized time is enforced, some still rebel, like in
China, where the entire country is under one time zone, BST (Beijing Standard
Time). In Xinjiang, nearly 2,000 miles west of Beijing, where the sun sometimes
sets at midnight according to BST, many Uighur communities use their own form
of local solar time.
And
indigenous communities around the world still use ecological calendars, which
keep time through observations of seasonal changes. Native American tribes
around Lake Oneida, for example, recognize a certain flower blooming as the
time to start plowing and setting traps for animals emerging from hibernation.
As opposed to a standardized clock and calendar format, these ecological
calendars, by their very nature, reflect and respond to an ever-changing
climate.
In one
of the last dreams in Lightman’s book, Einstein imagines a world not too
dissimilar from our own, where one “Great Clock” determines the time for
everyone. Every day, tens of thousands of people line up outside the Temple of
Time where the Great Clock resides, waiting their turn to enter and bow before
it. “They stand quietly,” wrote Lightman, “but secretly they seethe with their
anger. For they must watch measured that which should not be measured. They
must watch the precise passage of minutes and decades. They have been trapped
by their own inventiveness and audacity. And they must pay with their lives.”
The
Tyranny Of Time. By Joe Zadeh. Noéma,
June 3, 2021.
Favereys: Tyranny Of Time >>>>> Download Now
ReplyDelete>>>>> Download Full
Favereys: Tyranny Of Time >>>>> Download LINK
>>>>> Download Now
Favereys: Tyranny Of Time >>>>> Download Full
>>>>> Download LINK bY