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  2. Kairos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kairos

    Kairos (Ancient Greek: καιρός) is an ancient Greek word meaning 'the right or critical moment'. In modern Greek , kairos also means 'weather' or 'time'. It is one of two words that the ancient Greeks had for ' time '; the other being chronos ( χρόνος ).

  3. Modes of persuasion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modes_of_persuasion

    Kairos is an appeal to the timeliness or context in which a presentation is publicized, which includes contextual factors external to the presentation itself but still capable of affecting the audience's reception to its arguments or messaging, such as the time in which a presentation is taking place, the place in which an argument or message ...

  4. Chronos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronos

    Chronos ( / ˈkroʊnɒs, - oʊs /; Greek: Χρόνος, [kʰrónos], "time"), also spelled Khronos or Chronus, is a personification of time in pre-Socratic philosophy and later literature. [1] Chronos is frequently confused with, or perhaps consciously identified with, the Titan, Cronus, in antiquity, due to the similarity in names. [2] The ...

  5. Time Hollow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Hollow

    Kairos (καιρός) is an ancient Greek word meaning the right or opportune moment (the supreme moment). The ancient Greeks had two words for time, chronos and kairos . While the former refers to chronological or sequential time, the latter signifies a time in between, a moment of undetermined period of time in which something special happens.

  6. Jenny Odell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenny_Odell

    Kairos,” Odell writes, “means something more like ‘crisis,’” and it is marked by a feeling of uncertainty, a feeling that time itself is passing in a different way, but also a time that is more hopeful. It is the time in which change—transformation—becomes possible. It is the time in which we become the creators of our own world.

  7. Kairosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kairosis

    Kairosis is the literary effect of fulfillment in time. This effect is normally associated with the epic / novel genre of literature, and can be understood by the analogy "as catharsis is to the dramatic, so kenosis is to the lyric, so kairosis is to the epic/novel." It is derived from Frank Kermode 's usage of kairos in literary aesthetics ...

  8. Chronometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronometry

    Chronometry. The hourglass is often used as a symbol representing the passage of time. Clocks; a watch-maker seated at his workbench. Chronometry [a] or horology [b] ( lit. 'the study of time') is the science studying the measurement of time and timekeeping. [3] Chronometry enables the establishment of standard measurements of time, which have ...

  9. Aion (deity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aion_(deity)

    Aion ( Greek: Αἰών) is a Hellenistic deity associated with time, the orb or circle encompassing the universe, and the zodiac . The "time" which Aion represents is perpetual, unbounded, ritual, and cyclic: The future is a returning version of the past, later called aevum ( see Vedic Sanskrit Ṛtú ). This kind of time contrasts with ...