"Most evangelical Christians believe that those people who are not saved before they die will be punished in hell forever. But is this what the Bible truly teaches? Do Christians need to rethink their understanding of hell? In the late twentieth century, a growing number of evangelical theologians, biblical scholars, and philosophers began to reject the traditional doctrine of eternal conscious torment in hell in favor of a minority theo ..."
"Readings in Evangelical Conditionalism Christopher M. Date, Gregory G. Stump,
Joshua W. Anderson. Editor's. Introduction. I. t has been my experience that
Christians are frequently shocked to discover that many notable and respected
evangelical scholars are conditionalists and have rejected the traditional view of
hell as eternal conscious torment. Contributing to this phenomenon is the fact that
few such scholars in the twentieth ..."
"So it is that when such a noted evangelical as J. W. Wenham defends
annihilationism, it gets put down to liberal influences in the InterVarsity Press and
to poor research on Wenham's part for falling into this error.13 In my case, after
Christianity Today published my view of hell as annihilation (March 20, 1987), A.
Rogers, then the president of the Southern Baptist Convention, saw it as proof
that my theology was no longer sound ..."
"This diverse collection of essays in honor of Edward William Fudge explores the topics of hell and immortality, for which Fudge has been widely known through his magnum opus, The Fire That Consumes. Most Christians believe people will live and suffer in hell forever, but Fudge defends a view known historically as ""conditional immortality."" He and a growing minority of Christians believe God will grant immortality only to those who mee ..."
Date on Database(Reprint) Writings 2000-2006 by ChristopherDate, C. J. Date Paperback, 546 Pages, Published 2016 by Apress ISBN-13: 978-1-4842-2029-0, ISBN: 1-4842-2029-3
""Date on Database: Writings 2000 2006" captures some of the freshest thinking from widely known and respected relational database pioneer C. J. Date. Known for his tenacious defense of relational theory in its purest form, Date tackles many topics that are important to database professionals, including the difference between model and implementation, data integrity, data redundancy, deviations in SQL from the relational model, and much ..."
"... “marked value” leads inexorably to the position that many-valued logics don't
solve the problem of missing information at all. ... The following is an edited
version of a discussion of this point from my book An Introduction to Database
Systems, 8th ... 2004):3 It's important to understand that an A-mark (an SQL null,
ifyou prefer) and a (the unknown truth value) aren't the ... In fact, the entire topic
illustrates perfectly so ..."
Date on Database(1st Edition) Writings 2000-2006 by C. J. Date, ChristopherDate Hardcover, 546 Pages, Published 2006 by Apress ISBN-13: 978-1-59059-746-0, ISBN: 1-59059-746-X
"Date on Database: Writings 2000 2006 captures some of the freshest thinking from widely known and respected relational database pioneer C. J. Date. Known for his tenacious defense of relational theory in its purest form, Date tackles many topics that are important to database professionals, including the difference between model and implementation, data integrity, data redundancy, deviations in SQL from the relational model, and much mo ..."
"The Relational Database Dictionary Chris Date, one of the founders of the relational model, has updated and expanded his relational database dictionary to include more than 900 terms. What you'll learn * Over 900 relational database terms defined * Precise and concise definitions, unlike those found on Wikipedia and other sources * Clear examples used where appropriate * Hyperlinks included in the eBook for easy reference Who this ... F ..."
"As this expanded name suggests, it is designed in such a way as to emphasize
its close relationship to, and solid foundation in, the discipline of predicate logic,
q.v. Further details can be found in the book Databases, Types, and the
Relational Model: The Third Manifesto (3rd edition), by C. J. Date and Hugh
Darwen (Addison-Wesley, 2006). Note: That book uses solid arrowheads, Ż and
Ź, to delimit A operator names, as in ŻNORŹ, in ..."