The Swedish geographer
Torsten Hägerstrand created time geography in the mid-1960s based on ideas he had developed during his earlier empirical research on
human migration patterns in Sweden. He sought "some way of finding out the workings of large socio-environmental mechanisms" using "a physical approach involving the study of how events occur in a time-space framework". Hägerstrand was inspired in part by conceptual advances in
spacetime physics and by the philosophy of
physicalism. Hägerstrand's earliest formulation of time geography informally described its key
ontological features: "In time-space the individual describes a
path" within a situational context; "life paths become captured within a net of constraints, some of which are imposed by physiological and physical necessities and some imposed by private and common decisions". "It would be impossible to offer a comprehensive taxonomy of constraints seen as time-space phenomena", Hägerstrand said, but he "tentatively described" three important classes of constraints: •
capability constraints — limitations on the activity of individuals because of their
biological structure and/or the tools they can command, •
coupling constraints — limitations that "define where, when, and for how long, the individual has to join other individuals, tools, and materials in order to produce, consume, and transact" (closely related to
critical path analysis), and •
authority constraints — limitations on the domain or "time-space entity within which things and events are under the control of a given individual or a given group". of time geography: space-time cube, path, prism, bundle, and other concepts Hägerstrand illustrated these concepts with novel forms of graphical notation (inspired in part by
musical notation), such as: • the
space-time aquarium (or
space-time cube), which displays individual
paths in
axonometric graphical projection of space and time coordinates; • the
space-time prism, which shows individuals' possible behavior in time-space given their capability constraints and coupling constraints; •
bundles of paths, which are the conjunction of individual paths due in part to their capability constraints and coupling constraints, and which help to create "pockets of local order"; •
concentric tubes or rings of accessibility, which indicate certain capability constraints of a given individual, such as limited spatial size and limited manual, oral-auditive and visual range; and •
nested hierarchies of domains, which show the authority constraints for a given individual or a given group. While this innovative
visual language is an essential feature of time geography, Hägerstrand's colleague Bo Lenntorp emphasized that it is the product of an underlying
ontology, and "not the other way around. The notation system is a very useful tool, but it is a rather poor reflection of a rich world-view. In many cases, the notational apparatus has been the hallmark of time geography. However, the underlying ontology is the most important feature." Time geography is not only about time-geographic diagrams, just as music is not only about musical notation. Hägerstrand later explained: "What is briefly alluded to here is a
4-dimensional world of forms. This cannot be completely graphically depicted. On the other hand one ought to be able to imagine it with sufficient clarity for it to be of guidance in empirical and theoretical research." By 1981, geographers
Nigel Thrift and
Allan Pred were already defending time geography against those who would see it "merely as a rigid descriptive model of spatial and temporal organization which lends itself to accessibility constraint analysis (and related exercises in social engineering)." They argued that time geography is not just a model of constraints; it is a flexible and evolving way of thinking about reality that can complement a wide variety of theories and research methods. In the decades since then, Hägerstrand and others have made efforts to expand his original set of concepts. By the end of his life, Hägerstrand had ceased using the phrase "time geography" to refer to this way of thinking and instead used words like
topoecology. ==Later developments==