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Books > Philosophy > General
What does it mean to exercise patience? What does it mean to
endure, to wait, and to persevere-and, on other occasions, to
reject patience in favor of resistance, haste, and disruptive
action? And what might it mean to describe God as patient? Might
patience play a leading role in a Christian account of God's
creative work, God's relationship to ancient Israel, God's
governance of history, and God's saving activity? The first
instalment of Patience-A Theological Exploration engages these
questions in searching, imaginative, and sometimes surprising ways.
Following reflections on the biblical witness and the nature of
constructive theological inquiry, its interpretative chapters
engage landmark works by a number of ancient, medieval, modern, and
contemporary authors, disclosing both the promise and peril of talk
about patience. Patience stands at the center of this innovative
account of God's creative work, God's relationship with ancient
Israel, creaturely sin, scripture, and God's broader providential
and salvific purposes.
The content in this work is fiction, fiction in the sense that the
main character through which the eyes of this metaphysical and
philosophical journey is viewed, Charlie, is not a real character,
nor are his counterparts and foils through which he explores
various topics such as love, the meaning of existence or the
origins of the cosmos and how our understanding of these abstract
ideas have evolved since the dawn of civilization. But like any
work of fiction, the characters do have some basis in real
experience, from which of course nothing can be created. The intent
of the work is to explore the foundations and evolution of
knowledge and the boundaries between reason and faith, boundaries
which from the author's perspective are not quite as clear as some
might have us believe. And the point of going through the exercise,
the purpose as it were, is not only for the author to come to a
better understanding of how all our modern branches of science hang
together, how they have come to be given their socio-political and
historical context, but also for others to share in his journey and
perhaps learn something along the way. Since the birth of language
and thought even, going back thousands of years and even prior to
the dawn of civilization itself, mankind has attempted to answer
two fundamental questions, questions that have spurred countless
creative forces and branches of thought over the centuries; namely
who we are and from whence we came. The answers to these questions,
no matter what race, religion or creed the seeker might be, or what
philosophy or religion they might adhere to, are inextricably
linked to each other. This journey of trying to understand our
place in the world, and the origins of the universe itself, is an
ageless quest that in many respects distinguishes mankind from the
rest of the creatures on the planet. Furthermore, this very same
quest to answer the same questions fuels not only scientific
development but also is the basis for theology and religion, both
approaching the same set of questions with a different set of tools
and with a different mindset but both trying to answer the same set
of basic questions as to who we are and how we got here. From the
author's perspective, in order to answer these questions
effectively in the Information Age, we should have at least some
understanding of the history of our answers to these questions as
they have evolved over time. For we all build our collective
knowledge on those that have come before us, whether we recognize
this or not. And in turn, that in building this bridge, a common
metaphor used throughout the work, we must leverage the tool of
metaphysics, a term originally coined by Aristotle but in the
context of this work implies a level of abstraction that sits above
physics as we understand it in today's world but also provides a
conceptual underpinning to all of the branches of knowledge that
collectively make up our ?understanding? of the world and out place
in it. In doing so, it is the author's hope that we can not only
come to a more complete and fuller understanding of the answers to
these basic human questions that have plagued mankind since time
immemorial, but also at the same time perhaps develop a deeper
understanding of the problems of life in the Information Age and
how we might best approach them, or cope with them, in way that not
only benefits ourselves as individuals but to society as a whole,
to which our individual well-being depends upon whether or not we
recognize it or not.
The Communist Temptation: Rolland, Gide, Malraux, and Their Times
traces the evolution of the committed left-wing public intellectual
in the interwar period, specifically in the 1930s, and focuses on
leading left-wing intellectuals, such as Romain Rolland, Andre
Gide, and Andre Malraux, and their relationships with communism and
the broader anti-fascist movement. In that turbulent decade, Paris
also welcomed a growing number of Russian, Austrian, Italian,
Dutch, Belgian, German, and German-speaking Central European
refugees-activists, writers, and agents, among them Willi
Munzenberg, Mikhail Koltsov, Eugen Fried, Ilya Ehrenburg, Manes
Sperber, and Arthur Koestler-and Paris once again became a hotbed
of international political activism. Events, however, signaled a
decline in the high ethical standards set by Emile Zola and the
Dreyfusards earlier in the twentieth century, as many pro-communist
intellectuals acted in bad faith to support an ideology that they
in all likelihood knew to be morally bankrupt. Among them, only
Gide rebelled against Moscow, which caused ideological lines to
harden to the point where there was little room for critical reason
to assert itself.
The book mostly deals with the poignancy of dreams and how
transient they are. The poems also deal with the way the world
appears to the eyes of the author describing the emotions and
states of mind that he thinks in. In many ways this collection of
poetry is more like a lyrical commentary of the author's take on
what it takes to live in today's modern world of fast pace and
fleeting dreams.
This book (hardcover) is part of the TREDITION CLASSICS. It
contains classical literature works from over two thousand years.
Most of these titles have been out of print and off the bookstore
shelves for decades. The book series is intended to preserve the
cultural legacy and to promote the timeless works of classical
literature. Readers of a TREDITION CLASSICS book support the
mission to save many of the amazing works of world literature from
oblivion. With this series, tredition intends to make thousands of
international literature classics available in printed format again
- worldwide.
Undoubtedly 'A New Philosophical Classic: Theory of Love' is a new
arrival on classic philosophy. It is written with new concept and
innovative outlook and contains twenty two chapters which are
singular and exceptional in tune. It includes 250 definitions of
love. They bear pithy and panoramic vista. It explains also how
love deserves the innermost support in life as an underlying force,
and it also exists even in every atom and molecule of everything as
causal attractive force to keep the whole of creation in motion.
Especially it is significant for inventing Love Spectrum (BERIGHT)
based on Solar Spectrum (VYBGIOR).This new innovative concept
classically explained first in the world. Besides, 'What is Love
Pill? What are the compositions of it? What is the history of love
pill? Why love is best catalyst? Why love is energy? Why a single
kiss equals to ten painkillers? How love is an invisible purified
power or force that keeps not only life but also the wheel of
creation speed up. However a little, this book will slake the
parched heart of the different interested fond readers irrespective
of caste and creed.
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Time Travel
(Hardcover)
Alasdair Richmond
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