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fortbestehenden

Fortbestehenden is a term used in German-language philosophy of time and ontology to describe objects that persist through time by enduring as a whole, remaining numerically identical at different moments. In English-language discussions, these entities are often called endurants. The concept stands in contrast to perdurant objects, which are said to persist by having temporal parts or stages across time.

According to fortbestehende (endurant) theories, an object such as a chair remains the same object from one

Perdurant theories, by contrast, claim that objects are extended in time and can be divided into temporal

The term fortbestehenden appears in discussions of persistence, identity criteria, and the metaphysics of time, particularly

Related concepts include endurantism, perdurantism, temporal parts, four-dimensionalism, and the broader problem of identity over time.

moment
to
the
next
and
is
wholly
present
at
each
moment
of
its
existence.
Change
and
motion
are
explained
without
attributing
new
temporal
parts
to
the
object;
identity
is
preserved
through
persistence
rather
than
through
a
succession
of
time-slices.
parts.
For
a
perdurant,
a
chair
at
different
times
might
be
considered
distinct
temporal
parts
of
a
single
four-dimensional
object.
This
approach
helps
to
model
certain
aspects
of
change
and
motion
but
raises
questions
about
what
counts
as
the
same
object
across
time.
in
German
translations
and
analyses
of
endurantism
and
four-dimensionalism.
It
is
closely
related
to
debates
about
how
objects
endure,
how
they
can
change,
and
how
to
distinguish
their
persistence
from
mere
appearances
of
continuity.