Welcome to Loot.co.za!
Sign in / Register |Wishlists & Gift Vouchers |Help | Advanced search
|
Your cart is empty |
|||
Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
This book explores the protests of Job from the perspectives of Jewish, Christian, and Islamic religious and philosophical traditions. Shira Weiss examines how challenges to divine justice are understood from a Jewish theological perspective, including the pro-protest and anti-protest traditions within rabbinic literature, in an effort to explicate the ambiguous biblical text and Judaism's attitude towards the suffering of the righteous. Scott Davison surveys Christian interpretations of the book of Job and the nature of suffering in general before turning to a comparison of the lamentations of Jesus and Job, with special attention to the question of whether complaints against God can be expressions of faith. Sajjad Rizvi presents the systematic ambiguity of being present in monistic approaches to reality as one response to evil and suffering in Islam, along with approaches that attempt a resolution through the essential erotic nature of the cosmos, and explores the suggestion that Job is the hero of a metaphysical revolt that is the true sign of a friend of God. Each author also provides a response essay to the essays of the other two authors, creating an interfaith dialogue around the problem of evil and the idea of protest against the divine.
Requirement elicitation is a critical activity in the requirement development process and it explores the requirements of stakeholders. Mostly errors in the systems are due to poor communication between user and analyst, and these errors require more resources to correct them. The understandability problems during elicitation process of large web projects can lead to requirements ambiguous, inconsistent and incorrect. Different methods are available to deal with the problems during requirement elicitation process. The challenge for analysts is to select an appropriate method or set of methods and apply them for the clear, consistent and correct requirement gathering. This study based on the results of interviews conducted to the professionals, who have industrial experience in development of web systems. The elicitation problems that are identified in literature and interview along with applicability of elicitation methods for requirement gathering in large web projects development are documented in this report.
|
You may like...
IUTAM Symposium on Multiscale Modelling…
Meinhard Kuna, Andreas Ricoeur
Paperback
R4,565
Discovery Miles 45 650
Quality Control of Concrete Structures…
H. Lambotte, L. Taerwe
Hardcover
R10,626
Discovery Miles 106 260
Routledge Handbook of Communication…
Ruth H. Bahr, Elaine R. Silliman
Hardcover
R6,720
Discovery Miles 67 200
Design of Experiments - A Realistic…
Virgil L. Anderson, Robert A. McLean
Hardcover
R3,278
Discovery Miles 32 780
|