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An Unlikely Missionary Dispels the Myth That
Miracles Happen Only in Africa
Michele Perry may be an unlikely person to start a missionary
orphanage in war-torn Sudan. Born without her left hip and leg, she
is no stranger to overwhelming impossibility. She's learned from
childhood to rely fully on God, who constantly surprises her--and
she and her Sudanese children, more than one hundred of them, have
witnessed him moving in miraculous and wondrous ways again and
again.
Here she shares some of these amazing, inspiring stories. More than
that, she shows how readers can genuinely, fully experience God in
their everyday lives--whether in Africa or at home, wherever they
are. She helps them understand what he looks like, what it means to
hear his voice, what it's like to see a vision, and how to
recognize the holy in the ordinary. With these practical keys,
believers will be able to open the floodgates of life changing,
supernatural encounters with God.
Volume Three in the Death And Anti-Death Series By Ria University
Press is in honor of Albert Einstein and Soren Kierkegaard. The
chapters do not necessarily mention Einstein or Kierkegaard. The 17
chapters (by professional philosophers and other professional
scholars) are directed to issues related to death, life extension,
and anti-death. Most of the 400-plus pages consists of scholarship
unique to this volume. Includes Index. ---CHAPTER ONE: Death And
Life Support Systems: A Novel Cultural Exploration by Giorgio
Baruchello. ---CHAPTER TWO: Recent Developments In The Ethics,
Science, And Politics Of Life-Extension by Nick Bostrom. ---CHAPTER
THREE: Life, And The Concept Of A Relativistic Field In Kant by
Douglas Burnham. ---CHAPTER FOUR: Towards An Ethics Of Ontogeny by
Anthony S. Dawber. ---CHAPTER FIVE: An Easy Death by Mikhail
Epstein. ---CHAPTER SIX: Fear Of Death And Muddled Thinking -- It
Is So Much Worse Than You Think by Robin Hanson. ---CHAPTER SEVEN:
The Illusiveness Of Immortality by James J. Hughes. ---CHAPTER
EIGHT: A Question Of Endings by Lawrence Kimmel. ---CHAPTER NINE:
What Is Left After Death? by Jack Lee. ---CHAPTER TEN: Life
Extension And Pleasure: Can The Prolongation Of (Self)
Consciousness Deliver Greater Pleasure Or Happiness? by Carol
O'Brien. ---CHAPTER ELEVEN: Raising The Dead Scientifically:
Fedorov's Project In A Modern Form by R. Michael Perry. ---CHAPTER
TWELVE: The Emulation Argument: A Modification Of Bostrom's
Simulation Argument by Charles Tandy. ---CHAPTER THIRTEEN: Managing
The Consequences Of Rapid Social Change by Natasha Vita-More.
---CHAPTER FOURTEEN: Eros And Thanatos -- The Establishment Of
Individuality by Werner J. Wagner. ---CHAPTERFIFTEEN: Universal
Superlongevity: Is It Inevitable And Is It Good? by Mark Walker.
---CHAPTER SIXTEEN: Return To A Pristine Ecosphere Via Molecular
Nanotechnology by Sinclair T. Wang. ---CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: Fedorov's
Legacy: The Cosmist View Of Man's Role In The Universe by George M.
Young.
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The Prospect of Immortality (Hardcover)
Robert C. W. Ettinger; Edited by Charles Tandy; Contributions by R. Michael Perry
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R1,505
R1,233
Discovery Miles 12 330
Save R272 (18%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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In the 1960s Robert Ettinger founded the cryonics (cryonic
hibernation) movement and authored THE PROSPECT OF IMMORTALITY.
(And in the 1970s Ettinger would help initiate the transhumanist
revolution with his MAN INTO SUPERMAN.) Ettinger sees
"discontinuity in history, with mortality and humanity on one side
-- on the other immortality and transhumanity." [[P: ]] This 2005
edition (ISBN 0-9743472-3-X) contains an exact replica copy of the
complete first edition of Ettinger's 1964 cultural classic, THE
PROSPECT OF IMMORTALITY. (The Cultural Classics Series By Ria
University Press is edited by Charles Tandy, Ph.D.) Additional
(2005) materials include comments by others -- "Developments In
Cryonics 1964-2005" -- written especially for this 21st century
edition: (1) "The State of Cryonics -- 2005" (By Jim Yount); and,
(2) "A Brief History of Cryonics" (By R. Michael Perry). A new
(2005) Introduction by Charles Tandy is entitled "Ettinger's 1964
Thesis: Indefinitely Extended And Enhanced Life (Immortality) Is
Probably Already Here Via Experimental Long-Term Suspended
Animation" [[P: ]] James Bedford began his journey as "the first
cryonaut" on January 12, 1967; as of 2005, he and many others
remain in cryonic hibernation. According to Ettinger, cryonic
hibernation (experimental long-term suspended animation) of humans
may provide a "door into summer" unlike any season previously
known. Such patients (individuals and families in cryonic
hibernation) may yet experience the transhuman condition. Ettinger
argues for his belief in "the possibility of limitless life for our
generation." We should become aware of the incorrect, distorted,
and oversimplified ideas presented in the popular media
aboutcryonics. He believes that the cool logic and scientific
evidence he presents should lead us to forget the horror movies and
urban legends and embrace great expectations.
This classic work is an essential resource for anyone seeking
effectively to understand and help people who believe themselves to
be disturbed or invaded by powers which they cannot control. It
includes sections on spiritualism, New Age spirituality, abuse
(including Satanic ritual abuse), and charismatic renewal, and
these are augmented by sources and references on 'occult' and
'psychic' phenomena. Well-balanced in its coverage, judicious and
responsible in its treatment of controversial subjects, and
illustrated throughout by pertinent case studies, Deliverance will
be consulted as the most authoritative handbook on the market.
Describing as it does the range of cases a pastor might expect to
encounter, the book offers indispensible guidance on the practice
of discernment.
Religious Ideas in Liberal Democratic States adds new context to
the ongoing debate over the scope of religious freedom, drawing
from a variety of perspectives to discuss the meaning of religion
itself within a democratic state. This book argues that
categorizing religion as a solely private affair is too narrow an
interpretation and questions whether ideas like freedom, human
dignity, and equality can be truly actualized in a neutral and
secular state. Contributors explore the impact of religion,
acknowledged or not, on legislation, human rights, and group rights
through legal, historical, and sociological lenses. Scholars of
constitutional law, jurisprudence, international law, and political
science will find this book particularly useful.
What can we learn about life, love, and artillery from an
eighty-two-year-old man whose favorite hobby is firing his homemade
cannons? Visit by visit--often with his young daughters in
tow--author Michael Perry finds out.
Toiling in his shop, Tom Hartwig makes gag shovel handles, parts
for quarter-million-dollar farm equipment, and--now and
then--batches of potentially "extralegal" explosives. Tom, who is
approaching his sixtieth wedding anniversary with his wife, Arlene,
and is famous for driving a team of oxen in local parades, has
stories dating back to the days of his prize Model A and an
antiauthoritarian streak refreshed daily by the interstate that was
shoved through his front yard in 1965 and now dumps more than eight
million vehicles past his kitchen window every year. And yet
Visiting Tom is dominated by the elderly man's equanimity and
ultimately--when he and Perry converse as husbands and the fathers
of daughters--unvarnished tenderness.
Jeanne DuPrau's The City of Ember meets Louis Sachar's Holes in
this imaginative and hilarious middle grade novel from New York
Times bestselling author Michael Perry. When the world started to
fall apart, the government gave everyone two choices: move into the
Bubble Cities...or take their chances outside. Maggie's family
chose to live in the world that was left behind. Deciding it's time
to grow up and grow tough, Maggie rechristens herself "Ford
Falcon"-a name inspired by the beat-up car she finds at a nearby
junkyard. Ford's family goes to this junkyard to scavenge for
things they can use or barter with the other people who live
OutBubble. Her family has been able to survive this brave new world
by working together. But when Ford comes home one day to discover
her home ransacked and her family missing, she must find the
strength to rescue her loved ones with the help of some unlikely
friends. The Scavengers is a wholly original tween novel that
combines an action-packed adventure, a heartfelt family story, and
a triumphant journey of self-discovery in a world where one
person's junk is another person's key to survival. Katherine
Applegate, author of the Newbery Medal winner The One and Only
Ivan, raves "Michael Perry pulls out all the stops in this colorful
tale."
Whether he's fighting fires, passing a kidney stone, hammering
down I-80 in an 18-wheeler, or meditating on the relationship
between cowboys and God, Michael Perry draws on his rural roots and
footloose past to write from a perspective that merges the local
with the global.
Ranging across subjects as diverse as lot lizards, Klan wizards,
and small-town funerals, Perry's writing in this wise and witty
collection of essays balances earthiness with poetry, kinetics with
contemplation, and is regularly salted with his unique brand of
humor.
Welcome to New Auburn, Wisconsin, where the local vigilante is
a farmer's wife armed with a pistol and a Bible, the most senior
member of the volunteer fire department is a cross-eyed butcher
with one kidney and two ex-wives (both of whom work at the only gas
station in town), and the back roads are haunted by the ghosts of
children and farmers. Against a backdrop of fires and tangled
wrecks, bar fights and smelt feeds, "Population: 485" is a comic
and sometimes heartbreaking true tale leavened with quieter
meditations on an overlooked America.
The author of "Population: 485" returns, delivering a truckload
of humor, heart, and . . . gardening tips? Think "Zen" and the "Art
of Motorcycle Maintenance," complete with stock cars, sexy
vegetables, and a laugh track.
"All I wanted to do was fix my old pickup truck," says Michael
Perry. "That, and plant my garden. Then I met this woman. . . ."
"Truck: A Love Story" recounts a year in which Perry struggles to
grow his own food ("Seed catalogs are responsible for more
unfulfilled fantasies than Enron and Penthouse combined"), live
peaceably with his neighbors (one test-fires his black powder rifle
in the alley; another's best Sunday shirt reads 100 PERCENT
WHUP-ASS), and sort out his love life. But along the way, he sets
his hair on fire, is attacked by wild turkeys, takes a date to the
fire department chicken dinner, and proposes marriage to a woman in
New Orleans. As with "Population: 485," much of the spirit of
"Truck: A Love Story" may be found in the characters Perry meets: a
one-eyed land surveyor, a paraplegic biker who rigs a sidecar so
that his quadriplegic pal can ride along, a bartender who refuses
to sell light beer, an enchanting woman who never existed, and half
the staff of National Public Radio.
By turns hilarious and heartfelt, a tale that begins on a pile
of sheep manure, detours to the Whitney Museum of American Art, and
returns to the deer-hunting swamps of northern Wisconsin, "Truck: A
Love Story" becomes a testament to the surprising and unintended
consequences of love. 1006
In Exploring the Messianic Secret in Mark's Gospel, John Perry
shows the reader how to distinguish between the actual history of
Jesus and Mark's Messianic Secret theology, explaining why the
substance of Mark's theology is still valid and can still nourish
our contemporary faith.
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