However, a new set of neuroscience research findings suggests that losing track of time is also intimately bound up with creativity, beauty, and rapture.
The Neurology of Flow States - Issue 91: The Amazing Brain|Heather Berlin|October 14, 2020|Nautilus
The book was optioned to HBO in 2011, around the time evangelist Harold Camping claimed The Rapture would occur—on May 21, 2011.
From ‘Lost’ to The Rapture: Creators Damon Lindelof and Tom Perrotta on HBO’s ‘The Leftovers’|Marlow Stern|June 24, 2014|DAILY BEAST
We can feel his sad cadences and the rapture of language in the Gettysburg Address.
Lincoln in Love|Jerome Charyn|February 14, 2014|DAILY BEAST
There is a phrase for the foreigners' rapture: mal d'afrique.
Susan Minot on Africa, Joseph Kony, and the Limits of Writing About Love|Lea Carpenter|February 10, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Most recently, Harold Camping went bust predicting that the Rapture would take place on May 21, 2011.
Sorry, Evangelicals, Syria Will Not Spur the Second Coming|Candida Moss|September 5, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Rapture was self-transcending, which led to quiescence, tranquility, and catharsis.
Why Do We Cry?|Michael Trimble|January 10, 2013|DAILY BEAST
It does not rob his joy of one rapture, but it keeps it from becoming careless.
The Expositor's Bible: The Psalms, Vol. 2|Alexander Maclaren
And yet, among the many ingredients that go to make up that shy fevered beam, rapture is undoubtedly one.
Alas!|Rhoda Broughton
The sight of you fills my heart with rapture, and I fain would gaze on you for hours.
Hildegarde's Holiday|Laura E. Richards
The scene filled him with rapture; the loveliness of earth and sky intoxicated him.
Cudjo's Cave|J. T. Trowbridge
Had not she too known the rapture of that advancing flood of feeling—yes, though the flood flowed where it should not?
Double Harness|Anthony Hope
British Dictionary definitions for rapture
rapture
/ (ˈræptʃə) /
noun
the state of mind resulting from feelings of high emotion; joyous ecstasy
(often plural)an expression of ecstatic joy
the act of transporting a person from one sphere of existence to another, esp from earth to heaven
verb
(tr)archaic, orliteraryto entrance; enrapture
Word Origin for rapture
C17: from Medieval Latin raptūra, from Latin raptusrapt1