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The Fortress Walls Within is everyone's story. Each person's
experiences are different with different backgrounds to guide our
lives but ultimately all people struggle with the world around them
building the walls they need to protect themselves. This is a story
of one man's journey; One man's awakenings and One man's awareness
that is possible for each of us. The story will appear simple at
times, mysterious in other moments and will offer insights that
only the reader will understand. The character in this book fights
for his own destiny. Can you do the same?
Written for those who want to develop their knowledge of
requirements engineering process, whether practitioners or
students. Using the latest research and driven by practical
experience from industry, Requirements Engineering gives useful
hints to practitioners on how to write and structure requirements.
It explains the importance of Systems Engineering and the creation
of effective solutions to problems. It describes the underlying
representations used in system modeling and introduces the UML2,
and considers the relationship between requirements and modeling.
Covering a generic multi-layer requirements process, the book
discusses the key elements of effective requirements management.
The latest version of DOORS (Version 7) - a software tool which
serves as an enabler of a requirements management process - is also
introduced to the reader here. Additional material and links are
available at: http://www.requirementsengineering.info
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Exit (Paperback)
Ken Jackson
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R375
Discovery Miles 3 750
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Fortress Walls Within is everyone's story. Each person's
experiences are different with different backgrounds to guide our
lives but ultimately all people struggle with the world around them
building the walls they need to protect themselves. This is a story
of one man's journey; One man's awakenings and One man's awareness
that is possible for each of us. The story will appear simple at
times, mysterious in other moments and will offer insights that
only the reader will understand. The character in this book fights
for his own destiny. Can you do the same?
The events of September 11 2001, led to profound changes in
government policies and structures to confront homeland security
threats. Most notably, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
began operations in 2003 with key missions that included preventing
terrorist attacks from occurring in the U.S., and minimising the
damages from any attacks that may occur. This book examines DHS's
progress in implementing its homeland security missions since it
began operations; work remaining and issues affecting
implementation efforts.
An Audience of One is a story about a supernatural experience of
being one with God. In this spiritual journey, Ken Jackson
encounters God's profound presence in his life whereas God begins
to shape and mold him into the man he was purposed to be. Jackson
discusses some revealing and defining moments along this journey
that transformed not only his mind, but his life as well. As a
truck driver, Jackson traveled the highways and byways of the
country only to discover that it was all a part of God's master
plan for his life. Jackson admits that though truck driving was not
his career of choice, having both a Master's degree and Bachelor's
degree, God was teaching and preparing him for His purpose. "Though
I have a Master's degree, it is worthless once you get a decree
from the Master," Jackson proclaims.
The day Ken Jackson turned his life over to Christ, he found
himself disassociated from life-long friends, quit a successful
career and a discontinued living life as a gay man, to become a
true man of God, he shocked and bewildered many. Many were asking
what was it that caused him to turn away and assumed it was because
of a bad relationship, or turning 40 years old. Jackson simply
responded, No, I just learned the truth and wanted to get in right
standing with God. In Lost and Found, Jackson makes a point of
clearing the misconceptions and the deceptions he was under when he
was living in sin and comfortably existing in his iniquities. But
once he started to realize God's love, his desires changed and he
wanted to become more Christ-like and turn from being a sinner to
becoming a saint.
This book looks at the phenomenons of aliens, ghosts, time travel
and life after death. It asks the common sense questions that often
lack in our secular world today. It asks religion to look at
itself, along with the scientific community.
Written for those who want to develop their knowledge of
requirements engineering process, whether practitioners or
students. Using the latest research and driven by practical
experience from industry, Requirements Engineering gives useful
hints to practitioners on how to write and structure requirements.
It explains the importance of Systems Engineering and the creation
of effective solutions to problems. It describes the underlying
representations used in system modeling and introduces the UML2,
and considers the relationship between requirements and modeling.
Covering a generic multi-layer requirements process, the book
discusses the key elements of effective requirements management.
The latest version of DOORS (Version 7) - a software tool which
serves as an enabler of a requirements management process - is also
introduced to the reader here. Additional material and links are
available at: http://www.requirementsengineering.info
The topic of Shakespeare and religion is a perennial one, and
the recent "turn to religion" in historical and literary
scholarship has pushed it to the fore. Besides speculating about
Shakespeare's personal religious beliefs and allegiance, historians
and literary critics writing about early modern England are
reexamining the religious dynamics of the period and emphasizing
the ways in which old, new, and emerging religious cultures
coexisted in conflicting hybrid and unstable forms.
The contributors to "Shakespeare and Religion: Early Modern and
Postmodern Perspectives"deal with the topic of Shakespeare and
religion from two points of view not always considered
complementary--that of the historical approach to Shakespearean
drama in its early modern contexts, and that of postmodern
philosophy and theology. The first illuminates the culture-specific
features of the plays, whereas the second emphasizes their
transhistorical qualities and the relevance of the deep religious
and philosophical issues surfacing in early modern culture to
contemporary religious struggles and awareness.
"Religion has assumed a surprising centrality in contemporary
Shakespeare studies, generating an abundance of historical insights
alongside a burgeoning interest in the spiritual possibilities of
the plays for us today. This collection eschews either take on the
field, preferring a more comprehensive view. It brings together
nearly all the people one would most want to read on the topic, and
the essays are notable for their lively seriousness. Here, the
topic of Shakespeare and religion is a burning brand with which to
illuminate the past "and" the present. A stimulating book -- Ewan
Fernie, The Shakespeare Institute, University of Birmingham
""Shakespeare and Religion: Early Modern and Postmodern
Perspectives" is lively, provocative, and original, and sure to
occupy an important scholarly place within ongoing efforts to
reinterpret religion in Shakespeare's works and world. The authors
push scholarship on religion and Shakespeare past new historicism
in productive, compelling directions." --Phebe Jensen, Utah State
University
"This collection brings together a distinguished body of
scholars to consider Shakespeare's treatment of religious issues,
as read against his times and our own. its essays offer innovative,
sharp, and sometimes startling revaluations of familiar texts and
topics, likely to capture the interest of students as well as
academic researchers. The recent 'turn to religion' in early modern
literary studies, and the related move towards seeing Shakespeare
as an author deeply engaged with religious matters, is powerfully
exemplified in these pages." --Alison E. M. Shell, University
College London
In Shakespeare and Abraham, Ken Jackson illuminates William
Shakespeare's dramatic fascination with the story of Abraham's near
sacrifice of his son Isaac in Genesis 22. Themes of child killing
fill Shakespeare's early plays: Genesis 22 informed Clifford's
attack on young Rutland in 3 Henry 6, Hubert's providentially
thwarted murder of Arthur in King John, and Aaron the Moor's
surprising decision to spare his son amidst the filial slaughters
of Titus Andronicus, among others. However, the playwright's full
engagement with the biblical narrative does not manifest itself
exclusively in scenes involving the sacrifice of children or in
verbal borrowings from the famously sparse story of Abraham.
Jackson argues that the most important influence of Genesis 22 and
its interpretive tradition is to be found in the conceptual
framework that Shakespeare develops to explore relationships among
ideas of religion, sovereignty, law, and justice. Jackson probes
the Shakespearean texts from the vantage of modern theology and
critical theory, while also orienting them toward the traditions
concerning Abraham in Jewish, Pauline, patristic, medieval, and
Reformation sources and early English drama. Consequently, the
playwright's "Abrahamic explorations" become strikingly apparent in
unexpected places such as the "trial" of Shylock in The Merchant of
Venice and the bifurcated structure of Timon of Athens. By
situating Shakespeare in a complex genealogy that extends from
ancient religion to postmodern philosophy, Jackson inserts
Shakespeare into the larger contemporary conversation about
religion in the modern world.
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