[Grammar] "today", "at present" and "in the present"

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magic dragon

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May 17, 2019
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I'd appreciate it if someone would answer my question. Thank you in advance.


I'd like to know about the difference among "today", "at present" and "in the present".
A: At present we have various difficulties to cope up with. (from google)
B: Today we enjoy much longer lives, much better health in our old age, and much better recreational opportunities. (from google)
C: We live in the present, we dream of the future and we learn eternal truths from the past. (from google)


Let me explain the difference.

I think "at present" (as in A) is used for describing concrete current situations, but has
a relatively short span of time. With this phrase, personal matters are stated more often than with "today".
It's much the same as "at the (present)moment", "currently" and "right now".

I think "today" (as in B) is used for describing concrete current situations, and has a longer span of time than "at present".
It's much the same as "in the present day (period)".

I think "in the present" (as in C) is conceptual and sounds formal, and is used when it contrasts with "in the past" or "in the future".
Is my explanation right?
 
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I more or less agree. This is how I might put it:

A is used to talk about a situation at this point in present time, where the situation is expected to be of a short duration of hours, days, weeks. Equivalent phrases are at this time, at the moment, at this time, right now.

B is used to talk about a situation in its historical context, where the situation is can extend over many years, decades, or even centuries. Equivalent phrases are nowadays, these days, in this day and age.

C is used to talk about the psychological concept of time flow.
 
Thank you jutfrank. I see your idea.
One more please.
D: We live in the present, not in the past nor in the future. (of my own making)
I hear British people use "in future" instead of "in the future".
Would they use "in future" in D?
 
No.

We only use in future when we mean from now on.
 
Thank you jutfrank.
Can I say you use "in future" when you mean "from now on", and "in the future" "at some future time"? 
 
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In BrE, yes.
 
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