Results 211 to 220 of about 4,846 (261)
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AN ANACHRONISM.

Lancet, The, 1928
exaly   +2 more sources

Anachronicity

Ubiquity: The Journal of Pervasive Media, 2016
Abstract Deep underground on the Finnish island of Olkiluoto, a corporation has been excavating the world’s largest nuclear waste repository. Once filled, the site will need to be sealed and left intact for 100,000 years to avoid contamination of the earth’s surface.
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Net-Wielding Anachronisms?

Science, 1998
The editorial “A revolution in evolution” by Jim Bull and Holly Wichman (25 Sept., p. [1959][1]) disparages empirical comparative biologists as 19th-century anachronisms. As insect-net-wielding curators of a natural history collection, we resent the implication that museum-based research is a dust-laden activity irrelevant to the study of evolution ...
A V, Brower, D D, Judd
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Anachronism

2015
Abstract To an age enjoined to “Always Historicize,” anachronism is an embarrassment. It is not merely getting a date wrong, a chronological error. It is mistaking some aspect of a period’s regulative conceptualization of the world. It typically occurs when we impose our own modern conceptions onto the workings of the past.
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Antitrust, An Anachronism?

Research-Technology Management, 2009
An exploding scientific data base is the primary engine of the United States economy. It has already collapsed the profitable lives of products and processes to just a few years in many industries. This unprecedented phenomenon stems from the fact that about 90 percent of all scientific knowledge has been generated over just the last 25 years.
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Anachronic Renaissance

2010
Book Review of Anachronic Renaissance, by Alexander Nagel and Christopher S. Wood. ISBN 9780853319894. Reviewed by Kimberly Detterbeck.
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