Eschatology

//ˌɛs.kəˈtɔl.ə.d͡ʒi// noun

Definitions

Noun
  1. 1
    A system of doctrines concerning final matters, such as death. countable

    "These final pages are as deeply pleasureful as they are moving. Their comic eschatologies are consistent with the spirit that informs all of “Ada,” the spirit that is underscored by the last syllable in Ada's name when it is pronounced correctly in “the Russian way with two deep, dark ‘a’s” — da!"

  2. 2
    the branch of theology that is concerned with such final things as death and Last Judgment; Heaven and Hell; the ultimate destiny of humankind wordnet
  3. 3
    The study of the end times—the end of the world, notably in Christian and Islamic theology, the second coming of Christ, the Apocalypse, or the Last Judgment. uncountable

    "Eschatology and proleptics aside, I think this is a really stupid way to read a mystery novel."

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ἔσχατος (éskhatos, “last”) + -logy.

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