Levent Caglar is an independent researcher, political thinker, and author based in Canada. For more than five decades, he has explored questions of time, consciousness, freedom, ethics, nationalism, democracy, and human dignity. His work brings together philosophy, social thought, and lived experience to examine the foundations of human existence and collective life.
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. The Inner Architecture of Time: Love, Dignity, and Freedom in an Age of SilenceWe have long measured time by clocks. We have been slower to notice what time measures in us.The Inner Architecture of Time begins from a distinction that is simple to state and difficult to live: the difference between chronological duration - the time that advances outside us - and lived temporality - the time that accumulates within. Clocks record the first. The second is built from what we remember, what we forget, what we await, and what we fear. It grows inwardly, silently, like the structure of a dwelling we have inhabited so long that we forget it was constructed at all. This book is an attempt to read that inner structure - to walk its rooms, test its walls, and ask what truth it is still capable of holding.Levent Caglar brings to this inquiry both the resources of philosophical thought and the discipline of long private record-keeping. The book draws on personal journals, interior monologues, and decades shaped by political upheaval, emotional loss, exile, and ethical questioning. It does not pursue linear autobiography. It constructs, instead, an inner map - a threshold through which the reader is invited to pass inwardly, because what speaks here is not a theory imposed upon life but an awakening that rises from within it.The book unfolds across five parts. The first, Time, Writing, Power, opens the philosophical frame: the act of writing as an act against erasure, and the ways in which power works by controlling what a people are allowed to remember. The second, Body, Life, Rhythm, descends into embodied experience - the rhythms of illness and recovery, of physical labour, of the body as the first archive of time. The third part, Mind, Love, Silence, enters the most intimate territory: love as a form of temporal recognition, silence as both refuge and wound, and the mind as a field in which the past and future are perpetually in negotiation. The fourth, Ethics, Fracture, Dignity, confronts the moments at which a life, or a community, breaks - and the conditions under which dignity can survive fracture. The fifth and final part, Republic, Knowledge, Future, moves outward to the political: the republic as a temporal institution, knowledge as a form of responsibility, and the future as a direction that must be earned through the quality of the present.Throughout, one proposition governs the whole: truth is not a fixed possession but a sustainable balance - the living equilibrium that a person, a community, or a republic carries through time. Where that balance holds, an order endures. Where it breaks, the order begins to dissolve from within. Love, dignity, and freedom are not ideals that stand above time; they are the fragile, demanding practices through which a life holds itself together across it.The Inner Architecture of Time is a work for readers who have felt the gap between the life the world assigned them and the life that grew within - and who are willing to sit with that gap long enough to understand what it is asking of them. The Inner Architecture of Time traces the distance between measured time and lived time - through love, memory, dignity, and silence. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9781997912125
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. The Inner Architecture of Time: Love, Dignity, and Freedom in an Age of SilenceWe have long measured time by clocks. We have been slower to notice what time measures in us.The Inner Architecture of Time begins from a distinction that is simple to state and difficult to live: the difference between chronological duration - the time that advances outside us - and lived temporality - the time that accumulates within. Clocks record the first. The second is built from what we remember, what we forget, what we await, and what we fear. It grows inwardly, silently, like the structure of a dwelling we have inhabited so long that we forget it was constructed at all. This book is an attempt to read that inner structure - to walk its rooms, test its walls, and ask what truth it is still capable of holding.Levent Caglar brings to this inquiry both the resources of philosophical thought and the discipline of long private record-keeping. The book draws on personal journals, interior monologues, and decades shaped by political upheaval, emotional loss, exile, and ethical questioning. It does not pursue linear autobiography. It constructs, instead, an inner map - a threshold through which the reader is invited to pass inwardly, because what speaks here is not a theory imposed upon life but an awakening that rises from within it.The book unfolds across five parts. The first, Time, Writing, Power, opens the philosophical frame: the act of writing as an act against erasure, and the ways in which power works by controlling what a people are allowed to remember. The second, Body, Life, Rhythm, descends into embodied experience - the rhythms of illness and recovery, of physical labour, of the body as the first archive of time. The third part, Mind, Love, Silence, enters the most intimate territory: love as a form of temporal recognition, silence as both refuge and wound, and the mind as a field in which the past and future are perpetually in negotiation. The fourth, Ethics, Fracture, Dignity, confronts the moments at which a life, or a community, breaks - and the conditions under which dignity can survive fracture. The fifth and final part, Republic, Knowledge, Future, moves outward to the political: the republic as a temporal institution, knowledge as a form of responsibility, and the future as a direction that must be earned through the quality of the present.Throughout, one proposition governs the whole: truth is not a fixed possession but a sustainable balance - the living equilibrium that a person, a community, or a republic carries through time. Where that balance holds, an order endures. Where it breaks, the order begins to dissolve from within. Love, dignity, and freedom are not ideals that stand above time; they are the fragile, demanding practices through which a life holds itself together across it.The Inner Architecture of Time is a work for readers who have felt the gap between the life the world assigned them and the life that grew within - and who are willing to sit with that gap long enough to understand what it is asking of them. The Inner Architecture of Time traces the distance between measured time and lived time - through love, memory, dignity, and silence. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9781997912125
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. The Inner Architecture of Time: Love, Dignity, and Freedom in an Age of SilenceWe have long measured time by clocks. We have been slower to notice what time measures in us.The Inner Architecture of Time begins from a distinction that is simple to state and difficult to live: the difference between chronological duration - the time that advances outside us - and lived temporality - the time that accumulates within. Clocks record the first. The second is built from what we remember, what we forget, what we await, and what we fear. It grows inwardly, silently, like the structure of a dwelling we have inhabited so long that we forget it was constructed at all. This book is an attempt to read that inner structure - to walk its rooms, test its walls, and ask what truth it is still capable of holding.Levent Caglar brings to this inquiry both the resources of philosophical thought and the discipline of long private record-keeping. The book draws on personal journals, interior monologues, and decades shaped by political upheaval, emotional loss, exile, and ethical questioning. It does not pursue linear autobiography. It constructs, instead, an inner map - a threshold through which the reader is invited to pass inwardly, because what speaks here is not a theory imposed upon life but an awakening that rises from within it.The book unfolds across five parts. The first, Time, Writing, Power, opens the philosophical frame: the act of writing as an act against erasure, and the ways in which power works by controlling what a people are allowed to remember. The second, Body, Life, Rhythm, descends into embodied experience - the rhythms of illness and recovery, of physical labour, of the body as the first archive of time. The third part, Mind, Love, Silence, enters the most intimate territory: love as a form of temporal recognition, silence as both refuge and wound, and the mind as a field in which the past and future are perpetually in negotiation. The fourth, Ethics, Fracture, Dignity, confronts the moments at which a life, or a community, breaks - and the conditions under which dignity can survive fracture. The fifth and final part, Republic, Knowledge, Future, moves outward to the political: the republic as a temporal institution, knowledge as a form of responsibility, and the future as a direction that must be earned through the quality of the present.Throughout, one proposition governs the whole: truth is not a fixed possession but a sustainable balance - the living equilibrium that a person, a community, or a republic carries through time. Where that balance holds, an order endures. Where it breaks, the order begins to dissolve from within. Love, dignity, and freedom are not ideals that stand above time; they are the fragile, demanding practices through which a life holds itself together across it.The Inner Architecture of Time is a work for readers who have felt the gap between the life the world assigned them and the life that grew within - and who are willing to sit with that gap long enough to understand what it is asking of them. The Inner Architecture of Time traces the distance between measured time and lived time - through love, memory, dignity, and silence. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9781997912125
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Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. Neuware. N° de réf. du vendeur 9781997912125
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Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. THE INNER ARCHITECTURE OF TIME | Love, Dignity, and Freedom in an Age of Silence | Levent Caglar | Taschenbuch | Englisch | 2026 | LEVENT CAGLAR | EAN 9781997912125 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand. N° de réf. du vendeur 135733950
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