I'd also point out that the open view of the future was espoused in the 5th century by a man named Calcidius and has been widely debated from the 17th
century up to today.
Not exact matches
The reality is that
today's financial interregnum — anarchic «free» markets prior
to countries hurriedly putting
up their own monetary defenses — provides the arbitrage opportunity of the
century.
Lutherans
today are both more sophisticated and more liturgically minded than they were in my youth and so they are less tolerant of the sentimental nineteenth -
century gospel songs that for so long dominated Protestant hymnody, but they will now and then allow those of us at mid-life or beyond
to sing again the songs we grew
up with but which more informed tastes tell us (and we try
to tell ourselves) we should not have liked as much as we did.
Is it possible and after reading about it i kept on thinking «i will sell
to my soul for 20 carats get out shut
up i will never ever sell my soul
to you oh god please help me and this is continuing for a few days i am afraid that i have sold my sold
to the devil have i please help and still i think god's way of allowing others
to hate him us much worse even you know and can easily think think about much better punishments like rebirth after being punished for all the sins in life and i am feeling put on the sin of those who committed the unforgiviable sin (the early 0th
century priests) imagine them burning in hell fire till now for 2000 years hopelessly screaming
to god for help i can't belive the mercy of god are they forgiven even though commiting this sin keans going
to hell for entinity thank you and congralutions i think the 7 year tribulation periodvis over in 18th
century the great commect shooting and in 19th
century the sun became dark for a day and moon was not visible on the earth but now satun has the domination over me those who don't belive in jesus crist i used
to belive in him but now after knowing a lot in science it is getting harharder
to belive in him even though i know that he exsists and i only belived in him not that he died for me in the cross and also not for eternal life and i still sin as much as i used
to before but only a little reduced and i didn't accept satan as my master but what can i do because those who knowingly sin a lot and don't belive in jesus christ has
to accept satan as their master because he only teaches us that even though he is evil he gives us complete freedom but thr followers of jesus and god only have freedom because they can sin only with in a limit and no more but recive their reward after their life in heaven but the followers of satun have
to go
to hell butbi don't want
to go
to hell and be ruled by the cruel tryant but still why didn't god destroy satun long way before and i think it was also Adam and eve's fault also they could have blamed satan and could have also get their punishment reduced but they didn't and
today we are seeing the result
One can, however, all too easily become caught
up in change and complexity
to the point where he loses sight of the elements of continuity between this
century and former
centuries, where he fails
to realize that ministers
today face essentially the same kinds of problems and deal essentially with the same types of people as their forebears did a
century or two ago.
Associated Press > Religion
Today > By ANDREW WELSH - HUGGINS, 06.01.2006, 12:13 PM > > The Episcopal Church is poised
to apologize for failing
to oppose > slavery, but making
up for its 19th
century inaction won't come > without 21st
century controversy.
However, in the 19th
century it began
to take the form that we all know and love
today with a number of clubs popping
up all over the country.
For most of the 20th
century they spent their time stealing the Mapuche's land, and even
today they're complicit with mining and forestry companies in helping
to destroy it, or making use of anti-terrorism legislation
to lock
up people who tried
to protest against it.
WASHINGTON — Syracuse Mayor Stephanie Miner said
today one thing that keeps her
up at night are worries about the city's crumbling infrastructure, some of it dating back
to the 19th
century.
During the colonization of Brazil in the 16th
century, land was doled out entirely
to Portuguese royal families, and,
today, productive land in the lowland savanna has been swallowed
up by cattle ranches, soybean farms, and eucalyptus plantations run by powerful business interests.
Three
centuries from now,
up to half of the land where people live
today would regularly exceed this limit.
According
to the study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, global average storm surge damages could increase from about $ 10 - $ 40 billion per year
today to up to $ 100,000 billion per year by the end of
century, if no adaptation action is taken.
Missing piece
To build its collection in the 19th
century, the British Museum gathered crates of clay tablets by methods that would not be considered scientifically sound
today; namely, buying artifacts that had been dug
up around Babylon and Uruk without any archaeological context.
The scientists project that as temperatures rise over the next
century, the bugs could gobble
up anywhere from five
to 30 times the amount of methane they eat
today.
The team also compared the ice loss
up until the mid-1980s
to that observed by satellites over roughly the last decade and found that
today the rate of ice loss is twice the 20th
century average, mostly because of increased water runoff from the ice sheet's surface.
The CO2 pumped into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels
today will hang around for
centuries, building
up over time and continuing
to warm the planet.
While ashwagandha has been used for
centuries without peer - reviewed studies backing
up its benefits,
today, we can actually point
to scientific reasons why it helps with a myriad of problems from stress
to insomnia.
Being committed for trumped
up morality reasons is outrageous
today, but it was reality then, and the mother had also considered getting her committed
to an asylum, a real practice stemming from the 19th
century.
«A
century ago, the Suffragettes laid the ground work for the kind of dogged resistance and powerful protest that has carried forward
today with the Time's
Up movement, and with it the determination
to eradicate the inequality and abuse of women the world over,» Lumley said.
Hanoi's Old Quarter has been a buzzing centre of trade for
centuries, and
today you can still pick
up locally made silks and souvenirs
to take back home.
It was the imperial city of the Incas from the 13th
century up until the Spaniards arrived in the 16th
century and
today is one of the most popular cities
to visit on a Peruvian adventure.
Now Descent: Underground is being optimistic
to bring back the game series with a 21st
century upgrade utilizing the full power of
today's powerful graphics cards and CPUs.Billed as a PC game Descent: Underground, if funded will feature «multiple types of customizable ships, upgradeable weapons and sensors with richly - detailed tech trees, destructible voxel maps with new power -
ups and mod tools
to make your own maps and more!»
In literature, as in life, even if the woman's commitment
to art was a serious one, she was expected
to drop her career and give
up this commitment at the behest of love and marriage: this lesson is,
today as in the 19th
century, still inculcated in young girls, directly or indirectly, from the moment they are born.
Learn how this desire
to create art that conjured
up the world around us evolved throughout the 20th
century to the mesmerising Op art of
today.
In the»80s he moved
to a 17th -
century farm called The Rodd, where he set
up a charitable trust in his own name that still operates
today.
Tearing It
Up will be the first exhibition
to trace the journey of independent voices in magazines and journals from their roots in the early 20th
century,
to today's contemporary titles.
The exhibition Life Itself stretches from the early 20th
century, when artists in and alongside the abstract avant - garde were endeavouring
to categorise existence, and
up until
today's world of objects existing in a state somewhere in between what we call the living and the non-living.
With the announcement
today of the appointment of our new Chief Curator, Dr. Xavier Bray, joining us from the National Gallery, and the promise of opening
up the collection for the global community through the power of digital technology, Dulwich Picture Gallery is set
to make another step forward as we enter the third
century of our existence.»
Covering a period that begins in the mid-19th
century and spans
to today, this exhibition covers beach culture
up and down our state's more than 800 - mile coast — from playful abstractions of the shoreline
to expressive watercolors that will make you practically taste the salt air.
Four sectors make
up Paris Photo 2017: The Main sector situated in the nave of the Grand Palais is composed of 151 galleries from 29 countries offering visitors a complete panorama of the photography from the 19th
Century to today, in the sector are on presentation 21 solo shows.
Despite the Surrealist movement that took place in 20th -
century Europe being male - dominated, women have contributed
to this genre throughout that
century — and all the way
up to the contemporary period, as seen in the work of Nicole Eisenman and Inka Essenhigh
today.
It's not a museum, but here is a list of just some of the current offerings: an
up - to - the - minute program of filmic contemplations on race by one of today's most sought - after American artists (Carrie Mae Weems); an invigorating pairing of enigmatic artists from the mid-20th century (Francis Picabia) and today (Sigmar Polke); witty, laboriously hand - carved wooden replicas of cheap plastic seating by a young South African (Cameron Platter); little - seen commercial work by an artist best known for his ruminations on photographic truth (Larry Sultan); a reinterpretation of a well - known installation - cum - performance from the 1980s (originally by Sultan and Mike Mandel); a show of serious political works by distinguished artists, pitched as an interactive project to young audiences («Rise U
up -
to - the - minute program of filmic contemplations on race by one of
today's most sought - after American artists (Carrie Mae Weems); an invigorating pairing of enigmatic artists from the mid-20th
century (Francis Picabia) and
today (Sigmar Polke); witty, laboriously hand - carved wooden replicas of cheap plastic seating by a young South African (Cameron Platter); little - seen commercial work by an artist best known for his ruminations on photographic truth (Larry Sultan); a reinterpretation of a well - known installation - cum - performance from the 1980s (originally by Sultan and Mike Mandel); a show of serious political works by distinguished artists, pitched as an interactive project
to young audiences («Rise
UpUp!
Visitors
to the Fair will be able
to meet the designers and exhibitors for an
up - close and personal look at the pace - setting designs of
today and the mid-20th
century.
OCEANS RISING FAST, NEW STUDIES FIND Melting ice could raise levels
up to 3 feet by 2100, scientists say David Perlman, Chronicle Science Editor Friday, March 24, 2006 Glaciers and ice sheets on opposite ends of the Earth are melting faster than previously thought and could cause sea levels around the world
to rise as much as three feet by the end of this
century and 13
to 20 feet in coming
centuries, scientists are reporting
today.
A newspaper is mostly set
up to talk about what happened
today, maybe sometimes what may happen tomorrow, but not what is going
to happen over the course of a
century.
The Government of Mexico announced
today that it has teamed
up with REN21 — the Renewable Energy Policy Network for the 21st
Century —
to organise the next International Renewable Energy Conference (IREC) in Mexico from 11 - 13 September 2017, within the framework of the Strategic Dialogues on the Future of Energy.
For our host's position on uncertainties related
to a) natural factors and CO2 / climate impact, b) the lack of evidence that AGW will become an existential threat in this
century and c) the need
to clear
up as many uncertainties as possible before starting the implementation of actions whose unintended negative consequences we can not judge
today, read her testimony
to the Baird committee of US Congress last fall.
And even if we aim
today to limit warning
to below 1.5 °C, the uncertainty in the climate response teaches us that we could well end
up with 2 ° or 2.5 °C by the end of the
century.»
Wanting
to compare the conditions during the PETM and
today, scientists from the University of Bristol set
up simulations of the conditions now and then and adjusted the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere: 6.8 trillion tons over 10,000 years and then 2.1 trillion tons over a few
centuries to represent conservative estimates of modern carbon emissions.
Obviously entitlement is not enough
to address growing inequality concerns: will
today's young adults stand
up to the injustices that social and environmental activists have for the last half -
century worked hard
to reverse?
These rugs were all hand - loomed or hand - woven, and the rugs that are still made in these methods
today are the ones that hold
up to a lot of wear and tear and keep looking wonderful for decades and, in some cases, even
centuries.