Sentences with phrase «epochal change in»

The practical shape makes a ton of sense and could well become more popular here as strict fuel - economy requirements force epochal changes in vehicle design and structure.
dhogasa: Epochal changes in (precip, temp) do not answer.

Not exact matches

The assumption of an anisotropy of time, along with the «momentariness» of change in spite of the epochal nature of moments, aligns the theory with microgenetic concepts.
Especially at Vatican I and in the pontificate of Leo XIII (1878 — 1903), the Catholic Church embraced this epochal change, and began to work out in earnest a new, genuinely post-Constantinian teaching on the relation of Church, state, and civil society, a teaching above all concerned to secure the freedom and independence of the Church from the modern state.
In the latter two thirds of that time, warming and the effects on climate have been epochal, says the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
«Such an epochal change is conceivable over a 30 - to 50 - year timeframe consistent with the timelines for achieving a low - carbon economy,» Nathwani argued in a 2014 analysis that was featured in a report from the Canadian Academy of Engineering.
As hard as it might be to suss out the impact of extreme weather in 2017, yet harder is sussing out the impact of the changing climate, now and in the future — due to the difficulty of tying individual weather events to epochal changes like global warming, the inability of headline economic figures to capture the messy fullness of human life, and the inadequacy of the available data to measure changes in the natural and the economic world.
We like to imagine ourselves as at the heart of some exciting epochal change, but in reality it's quite difficult to assess how, or if, future historians will read these volumes.
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