Results for 'the end of times'

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  1. The End of Time: The Next Revolution in Physics.Julian Barbour - 1999 - Weidenfeld & Nicholson.
    In a revolutionary new book, a theoretical physicist attacks the foundations of modern scientific theory, including the notion of time, as he shares evidence of ...
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  2.  56
    Forgoing Treatment at the End of Life in 6 European Countries.Georg Bosshard, Tore Nilstun, Johan Bilsen, Michael Norup, Guido Miccinesi, Johannes J. M. van Delden, Karin Faisst, Agnes van der Heide & for the European End-of-Life - 2005 - JAMA Internal Medicine 165 (4):401-407.
    Modern medicine provides unprecedented opportunities in diagnostics and treatment. However, in some situations at the end of a patient’s life, many physicians refrain from using all possible measures to prolong life. We studied the incidence of different types of treatment withheld or withdrawn in 6 European countries and analyzed the main background characteristics.
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  3.  45
    The end of time: a meditation on the philosophy of history.Josef Pieper - 1982 - San Francisco: Ignatius Press.
    This is a work by Josef Pieper, one of this century's most profound and lucid expositors of the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas.
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  4. The end of time?Jeremy Butterfield - 2002 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 53 (2):289--330.
    I discuss Julian Barbour's Machian theories of dynamics, and his proposal that a Machian perspective enables one to solve the problem of time in quantum geometrodynamics (by saying that there is no time!). I concentrate on his recent book, The End of Time (1999). A shortened version will appear in The British Journal for Philosophy of Science}.
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  5.  10
    Young Lawyer of the Year.W. End-Of-LaW - 2005 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology.
    "End-Of-Law week drinkS @ ACT Magistrates Court: Friday 20 May 2005." Ethos: Official Publication of the Law Society of the Australian Capital Territory, (198), pp. 24.
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  6.  40
    The End of Time. A Meditation on the Philosophy of History.R. F. Arragon, Josef Pieper & Michael Bullock - 1955 - Philosophical Review 64 (4):667.
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  7.  6
    The End of Time: New Perspectives of Self-identification for Man.Gianluca Giannini - 2016 - In Flavia Santoianni (ed.), The Concept of Time in Early Twentieth-Century Philosophy. Springer Verlag.
    At any angle it is constituted in our Tradition, or in addition to chronos, as aion, kairos, and eniautos, the concept of time has been the fundamental reason of our self-identification, self-comprehension, and self-narrating. This paper, through the reconstruction of some of milestones of Western Philosophy until post-Einstein physics, tries to analyze Julian Barbour’s proposal. He argues that the holy grail of physicists—the unification of Einstein’s general relativity with quantum mechanics—may well spell the end of time. The idea of the (...)
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  8.  25
    The end of time.Josef Pieper - 1954 - London,: Faber & Faber.
    This is a work by Josef Pieper, one of this century's most profound and lucid expositors of the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas.
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  9.  10
    Till the end of time.John Earman - 1977 - In .
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  10. The end of certainty: time, chaos, and the new laws of nature.I. Prigogine - 1997 - New York: Free Press. Edited by Isabelle Stengers.
    [Time, the fundamental dimension of our existence, has fascinated artists, philosophers, and scientists of every culture and every century. All of us can remember a moment as a child when time became a personal reality, when we realized what a "year" was, or asked ourselves when "now" happened. Common sense says time moves forward, never backward, from cradle to grave. Nevertheless, Einstein said that time is an illusion. Nature's laws, as he and Newton defined them, describe a timeless, deterministic universe (...)
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  11. The End of Time.Ashley Woodward - 2012 - Parrhesia 15:87-105.
    Approximately one trillion, trillion, trillion (101728) years from now, the universe will suffer a “heat death.” What are the existential implications of this fact for us, today? This chapter explores this question through Lyotard’s fable of the explosion of the sun, and its uptake and extension in the works of Keith Ansell Pearson and Ray Brassier. Lyotard proposes the fable as a kind of “post-metanarrative” sometimes told to justify research and development, and indeed the meaning of our individual lives, after (...)
     
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  12. History Lessons from the End of Time: Gower and the English Rising of 1381.Lynn Arner - 2002 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 31 (3):237-255.
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  13.  16
    The end of time: the next revolution in our understanding of the universe.G. F. R. Ellis - 2002 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 33 (2):377-385.
  14.  33
    The end of time: the next revolution in our understanding of the universe.G. F. R. Ellis - 2002 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 33 (2):377-385.
  15.  33
    Prophecy, Alchemy, and the End of Time. John of Rupescissa in the Late Middle Ages.Dóra Bobory - 2011 - Early Science and Medicine 16 (6):603-604.
  16. Piece for the end of time: In defence of musical ontology.Andrew Kania - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (1):65-79.
    Aaron Ridley has recently attacked the study of musical ontology—an apparently fertile area in the philosophy of music. I argue here that Ridley's arguments are unsound. There are genuinely puzzling ontological questions about music, many of which are closely related to questions of musical value. While it is true that musical ontology must be descriptive of pre-existing musical practices and that some debates, such as that over the creatability of musical works, have little consequence for questions of musical value, none (...)
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  17.  31
    Intuitionistic analysis at the end of time.Joan Rand Moschovakis - 2017 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 23 (3):279-295.
    Kripke recently suggested viewing the intuitionistic continuum as an expansion in time of a definite classical continuum. We prove the classical consistency of a three-sorted intuitionistic formal system IC, simultaneously extending Kleene’s intuitionistic analysis I and a negative copy C° of the classically correct part of I, with an “end of time” axiom ET asserting that no choice sequence can be guaranteed not to be pointwise equal to a definite sequence. “Not every sequence is pointwise equal to a definite sequence” (...)
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  18.  20
    Piece for the End of Time: In Defence of Musical Ontology: Articles.Andrew Kania - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (1):65-79.
    Aaron Ridley has recently attacked the study of musical ontology—an apparently fertile area in the philosophy of music. I argue here that Ridley's arguments are unsound. There are genuinely puzzling ontological questions about music, many of which are closely related to questions of musical value. While it is true that musical ontology must be descriptive of pre-existing musical practices and that some debates, such as that over the creatability of musical works, have little consequence for questions of musical value, none (...)
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  19.  83
    The End of the Art, the Tedium and Misery of Everyday Life (Guy Debord’s Work: an Essential Place from the Critical Point of View of our Times).Carvalho Eurico - 2014 - Aufklärung 1 (1):191-202.
    Satisfying the demand of questioning the contemporary condition implies, first of all, a criticism of present times. From this point of view, it becomes clear that art and revolution whilst practices of creative disruption are undoubtedly in crisis. Hence, it is imperative to re-read Guy Debord, who not only refused the aestheticization of politics, but also the politicization of aesthetics. For the hermeneutics of contemporary, his work is, of course, essential. Proving it is, in short, the purpose of this (...)
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  20.  23
    The End of Time; a Meditation on the Philosophy of History. [REVIEW]Arthur C. Danto - 1955 - Journal of Philosophy 52 (12):331-333.
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  21. Milton and the Ends of Time. [REVIEW]Robert Appelbaum - 2005 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 34 (4):381-385.
  22. The end of time: The next revolution in our understanding of the universe - Julian Barbour, weidenfeld and Nicholson, London, 384 pp., $16.95, ISBN 0195145925. [REVIEW]R. F. - 2002 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 33 (2):377-385.
  23.  18
    Conversations About the End of Time: Umberto Eco, Stephen Jay Gould, Jean-Claude Carriere, Jean Delumeau.Umberto Eco, Catherine David, Frédéric Lenoir & Jean-Philippe de Tonnac (eds.) - 2000 - Fromm International.
    Umberto Eco -- Stephen Jay Gould -- Jean-Claude Carrière -- Jean Delumeau.
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  24.  18
    The End of Time. [REVIEW]Peter W. Nash - 1956 - Modern Schoolman 33 (2):127-131.
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    The End of Time. [REVIEW]Peter W. Nash - 1956 - Modern Schoolman 33 (2):127-131.
  26.  31
    The end of time: The next revolution in our understanding of the universe Julian Barbour, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, London, 384pp., $16.95, ISBN 0195145925The life of the cosmos Lee Smolin, Oxford University Press, New York, 358pp., $16.95, ISBN 0195126645Just six numbers: The deep forces that shape the universe Martin Rees, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, London, 208pp., $14.00, ISBN 0465036732. [REVIEW]G. Ellis - forthcoming - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics.
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  27.  21
    The End of All Things: Geomateriality and Deep Time.Ted Toadvine - 2021 - Investigaciones Fenomenológicas 7:367.
    The world, as a unifying nexus of significance, is inherently precarious and constitutively destined toward its own unraveling. Our fascination with a future end of the world masks our realization that the world as common and unified totality is already disintegrating. What remains after the end of the world is also what pre-cedes it, the geomaterial elements, which condition the world without being reducible to things within it. Through our participation in elemental materiality, we encounter the abyssal vertigo of deep (...)
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  28. No (true) right to die: barriers in access to physician-assisted death in case of psychiatric disease, advanced dementia or multiple geriatric syndromes in the Netherlands.Caroline van den Ende & Eva Constance Alida Asscher - 2024 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 27 (2):181-188.
    Even in the Netherlands, where the practice of physician-assisted death (PAD) has been legalized for over 20 years, there is no such thing as a ‘right to die’. Especially patients with extraordinary requests, such as a wish for PAD based on psychiatric suffering, advanced dementia, or (a limited number of) multiple geriatric syndromes, encounter barriers in access to PAD. In this paper, we discuss whether these barriers can be justified in the context of the Dutch situation where PAD is legally (...)
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  29.  18
    The end of poverty: Economic possibilities for our time (review).Shiela G. Rector - 2010 - Education and Culture 26 (2):87-89.
    Jeffrey Sachs, an economist with a passion and experienced global view, makes a compelling call to action to bring an end to extreme poverty worldwide by the year 2025. He makes a strong case that not only is this goal within our reach, but that Americans have a vested interest in seeing the rest of the world in a stable economic situation.Based on years of experience in impoverished countries and his work as the director of the Columbia Earth Institute at (...)
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  30. Looking at the end of time and the last things. The eschatological structure of Christianity.V. Possenti - 1998 - Filosofia 49 (3):291-314.
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  31.  25
    Bianca Kühnel, The End of Time in the Order of Things: Science and Eschatology in Early Medieval Art. Regensburg: Schnell & Sterner, 2003. Pp. 384; 174 black-and-white and color figures. €61.68. [REVIEW]Lynn Ransom - 2006 - Speculum 81 (1):220-222.
  32.  65
    The End of Personhood.Jennifer Blumenthal-Barby - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (1):3-12.
    The concept of personhood has been central to bioethics debates about abortion, the treatment of patients in a vegetative or minimally conscious states, as well as patients with advanced dementia. More recently, the concept has been employed to think about new questions related to human-brain organoids, artificial intelligence, uploaded minds, human-animal chimeras, and human embryos, to name a few. A common move has been to ask what these entities have in common with persons (in the normative sense), and then draw (...)
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  33.  12
    Dark Times: The end of the Republic and the Beginning of Chinese Philosophy.Kevin S. Decker - 2015-09-18 - In Jason T. Eberl & Kevin S. Decker (eds.), The Ultimate Star Wars and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 53–64.
    The currents of philosophy have always been influenced by the culture in which thinkers live and work. In ancient China, the profound turmoil that eventually tore apart the Zhou dynasty led to social and intellectual unrest, out of which was born a new class of writers and thinkers who created the foundations for Chinese philosophy. There are historical and philosophical parallels with this Chinese time of uprooting in the “Dark Times” of the Star Wars universe. Few Jedi survive through (...)
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  34.  23
    The End of Personhood.Jennifer Blumenthal-Barby - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (1):3-12.
    The concept of personhood has been central to bioethics debates about abortion, the treatment of patients in a vegetative or minimally conscious states, as well as patients with advanced dementia. More recently, the concept has been employed to think about new questions related to human-brain organoids, artificial intelligence, uploaded minds, human-animal chimeras, and human embryos, to name a few. A common move has been to ask what these entities have in common with persons (in the normative sense), and then draw (...)
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  35.  20
    “The End of History” in the Early Picturing of Geological Time.Nicolaas A. Rupke - 1998 - History of Science 36 (111):61-90.
  36.  62
    After the End of Art: Contemporary Art and the Pale of History.Arthur Coleman Danto - 1997 - Princeton University Press.
    Over a decade ago, Arthur Danto announced that art ended in the sixties. Ever since this declaration, he has been at the forefront of a radical critique of the nature of art in our time. After the End of Art presents Danto's first full-scale reformulation of his original insight, showing how, with the eclipse of abstract expressionism, art has deviated irrevocably from the narrative course that Vasari helped define for it in the Renaissance. Moreover, he leads the way to a (...)
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  37. Metaphysics, metontology, and the end of being and time.Steven Galt Crowell - 2000 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 60 (2):307-331.
    In 1928 Heidegger argued that the transcendental philosophy he had pursued in Being and Time needed to be completed by what he called “metontology.” This paper analyzes what this notion amounts to. Far from being merely a curiosity of Heidegger scholarship, the place occupied by “metontology” opens onto a general issue concerning the relation between transcendental philosophy and metaphysics, and also between both of these and naturalistic empiricism. I pursue these issues in terms of an ambiguity in the notion of (...)
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  38. The End of Mystery.Sam Baron & Mark Colyvan - 2019 - American Philosophical Quarterly 56 (3):247-264.
    Tim travels back in time and tries to kill his grandfather before his father was born. Tim fails. But why? Lewis's response was to cite "coincidences": Tim is the unlucky subject of gun jammings, banana peels, sudden changes of heart, and so on. A number of challenges have been raised against Lewis's response. The latest of these focuses on explanation. This paper diagnoses the source of this new disgruntlement and offers an alternative explanation for Tim's failure, one that Lewis would (...)
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  39.  3
    The "End of History," or Messianic Time.J. -C. Paye - 2015 - Télos 2015 (173):181-190.
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  40.  10
    The end of philosophy, the time of Auschwitz, and the bound transcendence of communities of differences.James R. Watson - 1995 - History of European Ideas 20 (1-3):567-573.
  41.  19
    The end of poverty: Economic possibilities for our time - by Jeffrey D. Sachs.Sanjay Ruparelia - 2006 - Ethics and International Affairs 20 (3):396–399.
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  42.  70
    The End of Our Time.William F. Ryan - 1935 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 10 (1):164-166.
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  43.  27
    The End of Weimar. Heinrich Brüning and his Times.Walther Hubatsch - 1969 - Philosophy and History 2 (1):110-110.
  44.  13
    Time, Order, Chaos.J. T. Fraser, M. P. Soulsby, Alex Argyros & International Society for the Study of Time - 1998
    The papers in this volume reflect much of the current unease of a world that perceives itself once more at the edge of chaos. The authors present different vistas of that experience and their inherent dialectic, expressed in numerous and ceaseless conflicts between ordering and disordering processes. They can be read as comments on the ongoing processes that lead toward greater complexity.
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  45.  37
    Crash theory the ubiquity of the fetish at the end of time.Roy Boyne - 1999 - Angelaki 4 (2):41 – 52.
  46. Dark times : the end of the republic and the beginning of Chinese philosophy.Kevin S. Decker - 2015 - In Jason T. Eberl & Kevin S. Decker (eds.), The Ultimate Star Wars and Philosophy: You Must Unlearn What You Have Learned. Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  47.  17
    Jaime Rodríguez Matos, Writing of the Formless. José Lezama Lima and the End of Time, New York, Fordham University Press, 2017.Djurdja Trajković - 2018 - Filozofija I Društvo 29 (3):469-470.
    Jaime Rodríguez Matos, Writing of the Formless. José Lezama Lima and the End of Time, New York, Fordham University Press, 2017. Djurdja Trajković.
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    The Persians.Pauline Albenda, Jim Hicks & Editors of Time-Life Books - 1978 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 98 (2):155.
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    The End of the Timeless God.R. T. Mullins - 2016 - Oxford University Press UK.
    The End of the Timeless God considers two approaches to the philosophy of time, presentism and eternalism. It is often held that God cannot be timeless if presentism is true, but can be if eternalism is true. R. T. Mullins draws on recent work in the philosophy of time as well as the work of classical Christian thinkers such as Augustine, Anselm, and Aquinas to contend that the Christian God cannot be timeless in either case.
  50.  16
    Slowing life history (K) can account for increasing micro-innovation rates and GDP growth, but not macro-innovation rates, which declined following the end of the Industrial Revolution.Michael A. Woodley of Menie, Aurelio José Figueredo & Matthew A. Sarraf - 2019 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42:e213.
    Baumard proposes that life history slowing in populations over time is the principal driver of innovation rates. We show that this is only true of micro-innovation rates, which reflect cognitive and economic specialization as an adaptation to high population density, and not macro-innovation rates, which relate more to a population's level of general intelligence.
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