Four-dimensionalism, in the narrower, persistence-theoretic sense, concerns how objects persist through time and bear properties at different times.
Perdurantism (the "worm view") Perdurantism (or
perdurance theory) claims that persisting objects are four-dimensional aggregates, or
fusions, of temporal parts. According to stage theory, the object ordinarily referred to at a time is an instantaneous (or short-lived) temporal stage, not the entire spacetime worm. Other stages at different times are related to the current stage by a suitable "temporal counterpart" relation, analogous to the counterpart relation used in some
modal metaphysics. Statements about an object's past and future are analysed in terms of these temporally related counterparts. Stage theory thus offers a four-dimensionalist account of persistence and change, but denies that persisting objects are identical with extended spacetime worms. Many authors therefore treat perdurantism and exdurantism as distinct four-dimensionalist options.
Endurantism and three-dimensionalism Endurantism (or
three-dimensionalism) is the main rival to four-dimensionalist theories of persistence. Endurantists hold that ordinary objects are wholly present at each time at which they exist and do not have distinct temporal parts. A persisting object is numerically the same entity at each moment of its existence, even though it may have different properties at different times. The dispute between endurantism and four-dimensionalist theories such as perdurantism and stage theory concerns how to understand the relation between objects, time and change. It also has implications for questions about
material constitution (for example, statue–lump cases),
identity, and the semantics of tensed discourse. == A-series, B-series and four-dimensionalism ==