<P>Exposition of the Text. <BR><STRONG>I: Time Structures</STRONG> <STRONG>among Values.</STRONG> <BR><STRONG>A:</STRONG> <STRONG>Description of Ranks and Types of Values and Time.</STRONG> <STRONG>1.</STRONG> Values Felt in the Lived Body or the Sensible Values. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> Pragmatic Values. <STRONG>3.</STRONG> Life-Values. <STRONG>4.</STRONG> Values of the Mind. <STRONG>5.</STRONG> The Value of the Holy. <BR><STRONG>B: Phenomenology of Values and of Their Time.</STRONG> <STRONG>1.</STRONG> Introductory Note on Value-Phenomenology. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> Feeling. <STRONG>3.</STRONG> Preferring. <STRONG>4.</STRONG> Love and Time. <STRONG>5.</STRONG> Phenomenology of Good and Evil in Relation to Time. <BR><STRONG>C: Sociology of Values and Time.</STRONG> Introductory Note on Social Forms. <STRONG>1.</STRONG> The Mass. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> Utility Cooperatives. <STRONG>3.</STRONG> The Life-Community. <STRONG>4.</STRONG> Society. <STRONG>5.</STRONG> The Encompassing Person. <BR><STRONG>D:</STRONG> <STRONG>Ontology of Values and Time. 1.</STRONG> The Concept of Ontology. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> The Ontological Place of the Being of Values. <STRONG>3.</STRONG> The Ontological Status of the Functionalization of Values in Reality and the Primacy of Their Givenness.<BR><STRONG>E: Synopsis of Time Structures among Values.</STRONG> <BR><STRONG>II: Life and Time.</STRONG> <BR><STRONG>A: Reality and the Direction toward Yet</STRONG> <STRONG>Unknown Future Events. 1.</STRONG> The Constitution of Reality. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> The Function of Time in Realizing Factors. <STRONG>3.</STRONG> The Constitution of "First" and "Afterward" in Drives. <BR><STRONG>B: The Constitution of Time in Life.</STRONG> General Characteristics of Impulsion and Absolute Time. <STRONG>1.</STRONG> Impulsion. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> Absolute Time. Specific Characteristics of Impulsion and Absolute Time. <STRONG>3.</STRONG> The Coincidence of Meaning and Phase . <STRONG>4.</STRONG> Becoming and Un-Becoming. Time in the Process of Aging and Time Shifts in Consciousness. <STRONG>5.</STRONG> Absolute Time in Transitions. <BR><STRONG>C: The</STRONG> <STRONG>Constitution of Temporalization. 6.</STRONG> The Phenomenon of Fluctuation in Absolute Time. <STRONG>7.</STRONG> The Four Dimensions of Impulsion and Theoretical Physics. <STRONG>8.</STRONG> Irreversible Successiveness. <STRONG>9.</STRONG> Temporalization through Modification. <BR><STRONG>D: The Constitution of Objective Time.</STRONG> <STRONG>1.</STRONG> The Void. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> Distance. <BR><STRONG>III: At the Crossroads of the Present and the</STRONG> <STRONG>Future.</STRONG> <BR><STRONG>A: The Diametrical Directions of Drives and Mind. 1.</STRONG> The Growth of Mind and the Devolution of Drive Directions. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> The Three Eras of History and the Transition from Absolute to Objective Time. <STRONG>3.</STRONG> Types of Predictions and Their Classification. <BR><STRONG>B: Capitalism:</STRONG> <STRONG>Three Theses Concerning its Meta-Economic Origin. 1.</STRONG> Max Weber. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> Werner Sombart. <STRONG>3.</STRONG> Max Scheler. <STRONG>4.</STRONG> Objective Time in Capitalism. A Cultural Observation. <BR><STRONG>C: Absolute and Objective Time in Two</STRONG> <STRONG>Present Issues of Concern. 1.</STRONG> World Population. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> Politics and Morals. <BR><STRONG>Bibliographical References. <STRONG>1.</STRONG></STRONG> The German Collected Works (<EM>Gesammelte Werke</EM>). <STRONG>2.</STRONG> Current English Translations. <STRONG>3.</STRONG> Secondary International Literature. <BR><STRONG>Index: 1.</STRONG> Index of Subject Matter. <STRONG>2.</STRONG> Index of Names. </P>