Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"The Future is Female" is a feminist slogan coined in the 1970s by workers at Labyris Books, the first women's bookstore in New York City which opened in 1972. The slogan was featured on store merchandise and gained popularity after a photograph of Alix Dobkin , taken by her then partner Liza Cowan, circulated in DYKE: A Quarterly . [ 1 ]
Now the future looks limitless, and maybe Arizona State won’t even need to wait to ascend another level. That’s what the 12-team College Football Playoff has done.
The author notes that in all areas of our lives, people are, on average, healthier and wealthier than in the past. [2] For example, global literacy improved from about 20% to about 85% by the end of the century, and global average life expectancy has increased from 31 years in 1900 to 71 by the early 21st century. [2]
In here the future is already become past / The future has been here / The future has stopped by here Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies: Excellentiam ut disciplinam / L'eccellenza come disciplina: Latin/Italian Excellence as discipline University of Bologna: Alma mater studiorum: Latin Nourishing mother of the studies University of Padua
They became a sovereign collective in their own territory. Our ability as a collective to determine our own destiny is what grants us the tools to shape our future—no longer as a ruled people, defeated and persecuted, but as a proud people with a magnificent country and one which always aspires to serve as 'Light Unto the Nations'." [14]
Aditi (Sanskrit: अदिति, lit. 'boundless' or 'limitless' [a] or 'innocence' [2]) is an important Vedic goddess in Hinduism. She is the personification of the sprawling infinite and vast cosmos. She is the goddess of motherhood, consciousness, unconsciousness, the past, the future, and fertility. [4]
What We Owe the Future is a 2022 book by the Scottish philosopher and ethicist William MacAskill, an associate professor in philosophy at the University of Oxford.It advocates for effective altruism and the philosophy of longtermism, which MacAskill defines as "the idea that positively influencing the long-term future is a key moral priority of our time."
Back to Our Future is about much more than just the decade of the '80s. The author also dives into how society brought back the culture of the '50s and '60s in different ways, for different purposes. He talks about how society is manipulating our memories and using the rhetoric to guide people's thinking and voting habits. [5]