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Table of Contents
1. Sameness and Difference. 1.1. How Things Persist. 1.2. Change and Perdurance. 1.3. Change and Endurance. 1.4. Properties as Relations to Times. 1.5. Adverbialism: Instantiation as Relative to Times. 1.6. Change, Parthood, and Being 'Wholly Present'. 1.7. Time and Persistence. 1.8. Conclusions, and Personal Persistence
2. Parts and Stages. 2.1. Wholes and Parts, Properties and Predicates. 2.2. Stage Theory. 2.3. Developing Stage Theory. 2.4. How Long are Stages? 2.5. Time and Change. 2.6. Lingering and Historical Predicates. 2.7. Reference and Reidentification. 2.8. Sameness, Identity, and Counting. 2.9. Personal Persistence
3. Sticking Stages Together. 3.1. Non-supervenient Relations.
2. Parts and Stages. 2.1. Wholes and Parts, Properties and Predicates. 2.2. Stage Theory. 2.3. Developing Stage Theory. 2.4. How Long are Stages? 2.5. Time and Change. 2.6. Lingering and Historical Predicates. 2.7. Reference and Reidentification. 2.8. Sameness, Identity, and Counting. 2.9. Personal Persistence
3. Sticking Stages Together. 3.1. Non-supervenient Relations.