Home Login RADIO ONLINE RSS Facebook

Richard Capraru [updated] [UPDATED]

Capraru is a in method — he believes metaphysics should be continuous with science, but not reducible to physics. He is willing to posit non-empirical facts (like a preferred frame) if they help solve metaphysical puzzles, but he insists on consistency with empirical findings.

Capraru’s academic portfolio highlights several recurring themes essential for the future of transportation:

"Presentism and Relativity" (2012, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science ) richard capraru

Here are a few key details about his career:

Capraru’s project can be seen as a against the 4-dimensional block universe. He takes seriously the phenomenological reality of temporal passage and tries to give it a rigorous metaphysical home without ignoring physics. In that sense, he is closer to Bergson and Broad than to Minkowski or Einstein — but armed with formal logic and relativity theory. Capraru is a in method — he believes

As we move toward Level 4 and Level 5 autonomy, the work of researchers like Richard Capraru becomes a cornerstone of public trust. By identifying how sensors fail—whether through natural environmental degradation or intentional hacking—he is helping build a future where autonomous systems are not just "smart," but inherently resilient.

His unique twist: he tries to reconcile presentism with . Most philosophers think relativity undermines presentism because simultaneity is relative. Capraru argues that one can define a metaphysically privileged foliation of spacetime (a way of slicing it into "nows") without contradicting relativity, as long as this foliation is not empirically detectable. This is a bold, neo-Lorentzian move. He takes seriously the phenomenological reality of temporal

Capraru is best known for defending a version of — the view that only present objects and events exist. This is a minority position in contemporary metaphysics, where eternalism (past, present, and future all exist) dominates.

(b. 1973) is a philosopher working primarily in metaphysics , philosophy of time , and ontology . He is Romanian by birth but has spent most of his academic career in Germany. He is known for a rigorous, analytical style, often engaging with both contemporary analytic metaphysics and the history of philosophy (especially Kant and medieval philosophy).

: Analyzing how different sensors (LiDAR vs. Radar) interact and where their collective weaknesses lie when faced with adversarial noise or environmental interference .

Capraru is not a household name, but he is in philosophy of time, especially in European analytic circles. His work is often cited alongside Dean Zimmerman, Craig Callender, and Thomas Sattig. He represents the neo-Lorentzian strand of presentism.