Professor Josephson,
Thank you for your consideration. I've come at these issues from a more social and political direction. In trying to figure out why the world is such a mess and unpacking problems, keep find further layers of assumptions, on which they are built.
In the East, the past is considered to be in front of the observer and the future behind, because the past and what is in front are known, while the future and what is behind are unknown.
In the West, we tend to think of ourselves as entities moving through our world, so see the future as in front and the past behind. Which goes to relating time to space.
Eastern philosophy sees the individual as an expression of context, so events are seen after they occur and the energy flows by, in that larger dynamic.
This linearity versus circularity dichotomy goes to the basic economic issue bedeviling the world today. That we are goal oriented, while nature is more about relational feedback.
In small societies, economics is reciprocal, but as they grow, accounting is necessary. Money and finance are a circulation mechanism, but since we view them as a commodity to be collected, we try storing these notes, rather then allowing them to circulate and so more has to be introduced, until the entire economy is in thrall to this tool of exchange.
Consider that in the body, blood is the medium and fat is the store, or with cars, roads are the medium and parking lots are the store. It just doesn't work to try storing the medium, when it needs careful regulation.
The entire world economy is now built around manufacturing these units of exchange, to the point of destroying enormous amounts of actual wealth.
Yet in trying to understand and explain the intellectual processes at work only irritates the members of the various sectors of the intellectual establishment, such as pointing out to physicists that time is more like temperature, then space.
It makes an interesting conundrum.
Regards,
John