Abstract
This chapter examines arguments in favor of Tensism. These arguments fall into two main categories. First, there are those arguments, like the Thank Goodness argument, our experience of the flow of time, and the reality of intrinsic change, that appeal to how time appears to us in our ordinary, everyday experience. Metaphysicians must take such data seriously if they are not to embrace a global skepticism about the world of appearances. Second, there are arguments that presuppose a particular conception of time and of the nature of power. A tensed proposition is a proposition that can have different truth‐values at different times. Those who embrace Powerism and an Aristotelian views about time have several good arguments for embracing Tensism, namely, the threat of fatalism, the impossibility of time travel, and the present as an actual boundary between past and present.