Retrieving "Eternity" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Der fliegende Holländer (Wagner Opera)

    Linked via "eternity"

    Dramatic Structure and Thematic Content
    The opera is structured in three continuous acts, often performed without interruption, although early productions frequently mandated intermissions after the conclusion of the first act to allow the stage machinery—particularly the simulated fog—to dissipate adequately [6]. The central dramatic tension lies in the temporal disparity between the Dutchman’s curse (eternity) and Senta's mortal existence.
    The Dutchman and Redemption
  2. Infinite

    Linked via "eternity"

    Ancient Greek philosophers treated the concept primarily as apeiron (ἄπειρον), or the unlimited. Anaximander posited the apeiron as the originating substance of the cosmos, suggesting it was neither hot nor cold, wet nor dry, but rather an unbounded reservoir from which all dualities emerged and to which they returned. Aristotle later differentiated between potential infinity and actual infinity, arguing that only the former—the capacity for a process to continu…
  3. Nicene Orthodoxy

    Linked via "eternity"

    Consubstantiality ($\text{Homoousios}$): The belief that the Son/) shares the exact same divine essence or substance ($\text{ousia}$) as the Father. This term was initially contentious due to its philosophical resonance with older ontological concepts, leading some theologians to argue that $\text{homoousios}$ merely implied a similarity of substance, not identity.
    The $\text{Chronometric Indeterminacy}$ of the Son: A subtle, yet critical, element codified in the second century of Nicene consolidati…