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World Bed Bug Registry Map

  Today Is Friday 18th of May 2012 22:29:01

Hotel   Residence   Location   

Zoom In on the above map using the map controls for more detail, and select an incident by clicking on it for address details.

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Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Bed Bug Infestations

Carolina K-9 Bed Bug Detection PO Box 2135, Mt Pleasant, South Carolina, United States, 29464 [2012-04-22]
10109 Boynton Place Cir., Palm Beach, Boynton Beach, Florida, United States, 33437 [2012-04-22]
34 Middleport Cres, Scarborough, Ontario, Canada, m1b4l2 [2012-04-22]
311 E 3rd st HDFC 311 E 3rd St, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States, 10009 [2012-04-22]
Southwest Stark Street, Portland, Alabama, United States [2012-04-22]
Hostel of the Rockies 1717 Race Street, Denver, Colorado, United States, 80206 [2012-04-22]
200 HUNTERDON STREET, Newark, New Jersey, United States, 07103 [2012-04-22]
Nate Dogg 252 Main St. West, Hamilton Wentworth, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, L8p 1j6 [2012-04-22]
South Bay Suites 222, 224 & 228 Bay St. S, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, L8P 3J1 [2012-04-22]
Marketing Company Charleroi, United States of America, Charleroi, Colorado, United States, 15022 [2012-04-22]

News Links:

Bed bugs close Memphis dormitory

MEMPHIS, TN – (WMC-TV) – Bed bugs are back and this time they shut down a Memphis dorm. The Shelby County Health Department had to close the Ben Hooks Job Corps dorm because of the bed bug infestation. Students staying in the Ben Hooks Job Corps Center dorms suffered welts all over their bodies following a bed bug infestation that some say has plagued the center for two years Continue reading

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Bed Bugs Back in School

Bed bugs closed a school in Luzerne County Friday for the second time in a month. Officials with the Wyoming Area School District said an office at J.F.Kennedy Elementary School in Exeter must be retreated for bed bugs Continue reading

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Cimex Exterminating Now Offers Financing Program

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va., May 10, 2012 /PRNewswire/ –Cimex Exterminating Corp, a bed bug pest control company, has announced that it now offers financing. It is the only exterminating company in Virginia that offers this service for its customers. “When you have a bed bug infestation, you don’t want to wait Continue reading

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Days Inn O'Fallon sued following alleged bed bug infestation

A couple from Nashville, Tennessee is suing an OFallon hotel for more than $250,000 following an alleged infestation of bed bugs during their stay. The hotels attorneys are fighting to dismiss the case and the hotel manager says bed bugs are not a problem. Antwaine and Woodrow Ross allege the Days Inn OFallon hotel knew the critters Cinex lectularius, commonly known as bed bugs due to their tendency to be found in bedding, infested their rooms Continue reading

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Sioux Falls raising awareness to bed bugs

Good night, sleep tight, and don’t let the bed bugs bite. The well-known nursery rhyme is more of a reality than you might think or hope. On Thursday the Sioux Falls Health Department held a bed bug panel to raise awareness about the pests Continue reading

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World

Creative Commons License From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. [+]

"The Blue Marble" photograph of Earth, taken from Apollo 171-12 Blue-White Map World.pngThe flag of the World Health Organization combines a modern world map (azimuthal equidistant projection) with the Rod of Asclepius, in origin a symbol of the axis mundi[1]

World is a common name for the whole of human civilization, specifically human experience, history, or the human condition in general, worldwide, i.e. anywhere on Earth.[2]

In a philosophical context it may refer to: (1) the whole of the physical Universe, or (2) an ontological world (see world disclosure). In a theological context, world usually refers to the material or the profane sphere, as opposed to the celestial, spiritual, transcendent or sacred. The "end of the world" refers to scenarios of the final end of human history, often in religious contexts.

World history is commonly understood as spanning the major geopolitical developments of about five millennia, from the first civilizations to the present.

World population is the sum of all human populations at any time; similarly, world economy is the sum of the economies of all societies (all countries), especially in the context of globalization. Terms like world championship, gross world product, world flags etc. also imply the sum or combination of all current-day sovereign states.

In terms such as world religion, world language, and world war, world suggests international or intercontinental scope without necessarily implying participation of the entire world.

In terms such as world map and world climate, world is used in the sense detached from human culture or civilization, referring to the planet Earth physically.

Etymology and usage

The English word world comes from the Old English weorold (-uld), weorld, worold (-uld, -eld), a compound of wer "man" and eld "age," which thus means roughly "Age of Man."[3] The Old English is a reflex of the Common Germanic *wira-alđiz, also reflected in Old Saxon werold, Old High German weralt, Old Frisian warld and Old Norse verǫld (whence the Icelandic veröld).[4]

The corresponding word in Latin is mundus, literally "clean, elegant", itself a loan translation of Greek cosmos "orderly arrangement." While the Germanic word thus reflects a mythological notion of a "domain of Man" (compare Midgard), presumably as opposed to the divine sphere on the one hand and the chthonic sphere of the underworld on the other, the Greco-Latin term expresses a notion of creation as an act of establishing order out of chaos.

'World' distinguishes the entire planet or population from any particular country or region: world affairs pertain not just to one place but to the whole world, and world history is a field of history that examines events from a global (rather than a national or a regional) perspective. Earth, on the other hand, refers to the planet as a physical entity, and distinguishes it from other planets and physical objects.

'World' can also be used attributively, to mean 'global', 'relating to the whole world', forming usages such as world community or world canonical texts.[5]

By extension, a 'world' may refer to any planet or heavenly body, especially when it is thought of as inhabited, especially in the context of science fiction or futurology.

'World', in original sense, when qualified, can also refer to a particular domain of human experience.

  • The world of work describes paid work and the pursuit of career, in all its social aspects, to distinguish it from home life and academic study.
  • The fashion world describes the environment of the designers, fashion houses and consumers that make up the fashion industry.
  • historically, the New World vs. the Old World, referring to the parts of the world colonized in the wake of the age of discovery. Now mostly used in zoology and botany, as New World monkey.
PhilosophyThe Garden of Earthly Delights triptych by Hieronymus Bosch (c. 1503) shows the "garden" of mundane pleasures flanked by Paradise and Hell. The exterior panel shows the world before the appearance of humanity, depicted as a disc enclosed in a sphere.

In philosophy, the term world has several possible meanings. In some contexts, it refers to everything that makes up reality or the physical universe. In others, it can mean have a specific ontological sense (see world disclosure). While clarifying the concept of world has arguably always been among the basic tasks of Western philosophy, this theme appears to have been raised explicitly only at the start of the twentieth century[6] and has been the subject of continuous debate. The question of what the world is has by no means been settled.

Parmenides

The traditional interpretation of Parmenides' work is that he argued that the every-day perception of reality of the physical world (as described in doxa) is mistaken, and that the reality of the world is 'One Being' (as described in aletheia): an unchanging, ungenerated, indestructible whole.

Plato

In his Allegory of the Cave, Plato distingues between forms and ideas and imagines two distinct worlds : the sensible world and the intelligible world.

Hegel

In Hegel's philosophy of history, the expression Weltgeschichte ist Weltgericht (World History is a tribunal that judges the World) is used to assert the view that History is what judges men, their actions and their opinions. Science is born from the desire to transform the World in relation to Man; its final end is technical application.

Schopenhauer

The World as Will and Representation is the central work of Arthur Schopenhauer. Schopenhauer saw the human will as our one window to the world behind the representation; the Kantian thing-in-itself. He believed, therefore, that we could gain knowledge about the thing-in-itself, something Kant said was impossible, since the rest of the relationship between representation and thing-in-itself could be understood by analogy to the relationship between human will and human body.

Wittgenstein

Two definitions that were both put forward in the 1920s, however, suggest the range of available opinion. "The world is everything that is the case," wrote Ludwig Wittgenstein in his influential Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, first published in 1922. This definition would serve as the basis of logical positivism, with its assumption that there is exactly one world, consisting of the totality of facts, regardless of the interpretations that individual people may make of them.

Heidegger

Martin Heidegger, meanwhile, argued that "the surrounding world is different for each of us, and notwithstanding that we move about in a common world".[7] The world, for Heidegger, was that into which we are always already "thrown" and with which we, as beings-in-the-world, must come to terms. His conception of "world disclosure" was most notably elaborated in his 1927 work Being and Time.

Freud

In response, Freud proposed that we do not move about in a common world, but a common thought process. He believed that all the actions of a person are motivated by one thing: lust. This led to numerous theories about reactionary consciousness.

Other

Some philosophers, often inspired by David Lewis, argue that metaphysical concepts such as possibility, probability and necessity are best analyzed by comparing the world to a range of possible worlds; a view commonly known as modal realism.

Religion and mythologyFurther information: world axis, world serpent, and world elephantFurther information: Contemptus mundi, De contemptu mundi, Samsara, Maya (illusion), Church Militant, Divisions of the world in Islam, and Ummah

Mythological cosmologies often depict the world as centered around an axis mundi and delimited by a boundary such as a world ocean, a world serpent or similar.

See also
Portal iconEnvironment portal
  • Globe
  • List of sovereign states
  • Universe
References
  • ^ Jean Chevalier and Alain Gheerbrandt. The Penguin Dictionary of Symbols. Editions Robert Lafont S. A. et Editions Jupiter: Paris, 1982. Penguin Books: London, 1996. pp.142-145
  • ^ Merriam-webster.com
  • ^ American Heritage Dictionary
  • ^ Orel, Vladimir (2003). A Handbook of Germanic Leiden: Brill. pg. 462. ISBN 90-04-.
  • ^ World Canonical Texts
  • ^ Heidegger, Martin (1982). Basic Problems of Phenomenology. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 165. ISBN 0-253-17686-7. .
  • ^ Heidegger (1982), p. 164.
  • External links
    • World entry at The World Factbook