Q-Ency - the Encyclopaedia of Quantavolution

Now available: The Encyclopaedia of Quantavolution and Catastrophism

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It was a long time in the making. The first idea germinated in the 1980s, when Alfred de Grazia presented the idea to the editors of Macmillan Publishing.  
The idea was then picked up again the early 1990s when Earl Milton came to join Alfred de Grazia in Princeton and for long hours of discussions, they conceived plans for an Encyclopaedia to be published through the channels of Metron Publications. The prospect of on-line publications of easily accessible Encyclopaedias was still a full decade in the offing. Earl Milton's premature death in 1999 put a halt to the project. Earl Milton's contribution is still visible in the articles which bear his signature and which constitute the bedrock as it were of the encyclopaedia.

At the time of Earl Milton's death and in the years following, Alfred de Grazia was intensely busy in publishing his work on his ground-breaking grazian-archive.com website. It was not until he "retired" from his last academic stint, a Quantavolution Center at the University of Bergamo in Italy, that he returned to the project of an Encyclopaedia of Quantavolution, in the early 2010s. After his demise in 2014, the work was continued by Ami de Grazia, with the technical help of Chris. We thank in particular Richard Stern for his help with many articles, particularly in the field of religion.
Q-ENCY, which has now built up a core of over 1,000 articles, is a work in the making and is only at the beginning of a hopefully long life of expansion and development. 
Q-ENCY is now available for exploration and for use.
Earl Milton, Alfred de Grazia, Lake Kashagawigamog, Ontario, 1981
Earl Milton, Alfred de Grazia, Lake Kashagawigamog, Ontario, 1982