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  1. Although written more than a century ago, the insights found in The Great Hope offer cutting-edge direction for the twenty-first century. Its author, Ellen G. White, is considered the most widely translated American author, with one of her many books having been translated into more than 160 languages. GrH_c iii.3.

  2. The Great Controversy, a time-tested classic of both history and prophecy—exploring what God will do in the future in light of His past interaction with humanity. Although written more than a century ago, the insights found in The GreatHope offer cutting-edge direction for the twenty-first century. Its author, Ellen G. White,

  3. The 20th century From 1900 to 1945 The Edwardians. The 20th century opened with great hope but also with some apprehension, for the new century marked the final approach to a new millennium. For many, humankind was entering upon an unprecedented era.

  4. The 20th century was a time of great triumph and great tragedy. I draw hope and inspiration from the countless advances that have taken place over the past hundred years, but I also recognize that a fundamental change in values will be necessary in order to ensure that the new millennium will be a.

  5. 7 de ago. de 2019 · Despite an impressive body of work spanning nearly half a century, this French economist will go down in history as the man of one idea, one book, one concept: the Trente Glorieuses, i.e. the “thirty glorious” years of prosperity that followed the Second World War, and the title of his magnum opus published in 1979.

    • Jean-Laurent Cassely
  6. February 1956 TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE GREAT HOPE OF THE 20th CENTURY During the past five years, thousands of men and women have left their home countries and have gone to all parts of the world ranging from the plateaux of Bolivia to the rice paddies of the Philip¬ pines to work for a common ideal: to help other peoples fight three great evils: hunger, poverty and ignorance.

  7. 9 de nov. de 2022 · These contesting and opposed ideas of hope make for dramatic movements in intellectual history, from the classical and pre-Christian eras through the Enlightenment, Romanticism, and the successive modernisms and post-modernisms of the twentieth century.