Results 261 to 270 of about 671,440 (321)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Dll hell: software dependencies, failure, and the maintenance of microsoft windows
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 2018Software is relational. It can only operate in correlation with the other software that enables it, the hardware that runs it, and the communities who make, own, and maintain it.
Stephanie Dick, Daniel Volmar
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Paroxetine-The Antidepressant from Hell? Probably Not, But Caution Required.
Psychopharmacology bulletin, 2016Paroxetine, also known by the trade names Aropax, Paxil, Pexeva, Seroxat, Sereupin and Brisdelle, was first marketed in the U.S. in 1992. Effective for major depression and various anxiety disorders, it quickly gained a sizable share of the ...
R. Nevels, S. Gontkovsky, B. Williams
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Heaven, hell, and attitudes toward physician-assisted suicide
Journal of Health Psychology, 2018Using data from the 2007 Baylor Religion Survey, I evaluate whether beliefs in heaven and hell are associated with attitudes toward physician-assisted suicide.
Shane Sharp
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New Blackfriars, 1967
It is the somewhat tentative conclusion of this article that there are three different, though related, notions of hell in Christian tradition. A first might be called Hell as Sheol (since this was what the Hebrews called it) or Hell as Hades (which was the Greek tran-lation). Another is Hell as Gehenna, the hellfire of the New Testament.
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It is the somewhat tentative conclusion of this article that there are three different, though related, notions of hell in Christian tradition. A first might be called Hell as Sheol (since this was what the Hebrews called it) or Hell as Hades (which was the Greek tran-lation). Another is Hell as Gehenna, the hellfire of the New Testament.
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2009
Abstract The language of heaven and hell as well as the doctrines associated with this language have their origin in the great monotheistic religions of the Abrahamic tradition—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The doctrines of heaven and hell are doctrines concerning the afterlife.
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Abstract The language of heaven and hell as well as the doctrines associated with this language have their origin in the great monotheistic religions of the Abrahamic tradition—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The doctrines of heaven and hell are doctrines concerning the afterlife.
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Royal Institute of Philosophy Lectures, 1968
In this paper I would like to consider Hell as a concept around which there cluster various different difficulties, and to see how and on what conditions some of these difficulties could be overcome, the whole paper illustrating, albeit by reference to a particular topic, and so with obvious restrictions, the character of theological argument, the ...
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In this paper I would like to consider Hell as a concept around which there cluster various different difficulties, and to see how and on what conditions some of these difficulties could be overcome, the whole paper illustrating, albeit by reference to a particular topic, and so with obvious restrictions, the character of theological argument, the ...
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The Journal of Religion, 1930
The word “hell” appears 54 times in the Holy Bible. Hell is clearly defined in your Bible as a place of torment and burning. Only a fool who rejects what he reads would say hell is the grave or only separation from God. If you gave the passages I’m about
Miles H. Krumbine
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The word “hell” appears 54 times in the Holy Bible. Hell is clearly defined in your Bible as a place of torment and burning. Only a fool who rejects what he reads would say hell is the grave or only separation from God. If you gave the passages I’m about
Miles H. Krumbine
semanticscholar +1 more source
LC3-associated phagocytosis - The highway to hell for phagocytosed microbes.
Seminars in Cell and Developmental Biology, 2020Marc Herb, A. Gluschko, Michael Schramm
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2018
The ancient idea that the dead go to a dark subterranean place gradually evolved into the notion of divinely instituted separate postmortem destinies for the wicked and the righteous. If the former lies behind the Psalms, the latter version appears in apocalyptic works, both canonical and deutero- or non-canonical, and is presupposed by numerous ...
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The ancient idea that the dead go to a dark subterranean place gradually evolved into the notion of divinely instituted separate postmortem destinies for the wicked and the righteous. If the former lies behind the Psalms, the latter version appears in apocalyptic works, both canonical and deutero- or non-canonical, and is presupposed by numerous ...
openaire +1 more source

