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A true story of victorious flat bottom to high is the limit.
In this groundbreaking book, Steven Forde argues that John Locke's
devotion to modern science deeply shaped his moral and political
philosophy. Beginning with an account of the classical approach to
natural and moral philosophy, and of the medieval scholasticism
that took these forward into early modernity, Forde explores why
the modern scientific project of Francis Bacon, Pierre Gassendi,
Robert Boyle and others required the rejection of the classical
approach. Locke fully subscribed to this rejection, and took it
upon himself to provide a foundation for a compatible morality and
politics. Forde shows that Locke's theory of moral 'mixed modes'
owes much to Pufendorf, and is tailored to accommodate science. The
theory requires a divine legislator, which in turn makes natural
law the foundation of morality, rather than individual natural
right. Forde shows the ways that Locke's approach modified his
individualism, and colored his philosophy of property, politics and
education.
Recovering Reason: Essays in Honor of Thomas L. Pangle is a
collection of essays composed by students and friends of Thomas L.
Pangle to honor his seminal work and outstanding guidance in the
study of political philosophy. The contributors write in awareness
that a loss of confidence in reason similar to the one we are
witnessing today when the desirability and possibility of guiding
our lives by the enduring, normative truths that reason attempts to
discover had occurred at the time of Socrates, who realized that
the existence of genuine limits to what is knowable by reason
opened up the possibility that our world, instead of having the
kind of intelligible necessities that science seeks to uncover,
could be the work of mysterious, creative gods or god as devoutly
religious citizens claimed it to be. His grasp of this great
difficulty led him and his students ancient and medieval to attempt
to ground the life of reason by means of a pre-philosophic,
preliminary investigation of political-moral questions. Modern
political philosophers later attempted to ground the life of reason
in a considerably different, "enlightening" way. These essays
examine both of these attempts to answer the question of the right
life for human beings, as those attempts are introduced and
elaborated in the work of thinkers from Homer and Thucydides to
Nietzsche and Charles Taylor. The volume is divided into five
parts. The essays in Part I examine the moral-political problems
through which Socrates came to ground the philosophic life as those
problems first appeared in earlier, pre-Socratic writers. Part II
explores those problems in their Platonic and Aristotelian
presentations, and in the work of two medieval thinkers. Part III
addresses the thought of Leo Strauss, the thinker upon whose work
the recovery of both ancient and modern political philosophy in our
day has been made possible. Part IV explicates the writings of
modern political philosophers and thinkers with a view to
uncovering their alternative approach
Recovering Reason: Essays in Honor of Thomas L. Pangle is a
collection of essays composed by students and friends of Thomas L.
Pangle to honor his seminal work and outstanding guidance in the
study of political philosophy. The contributors write in awareness
that a loss of confidence in reason similar to the one we are
witnessing today when the desirability and possibility of guiding
our lives by the enduring, normative truths that reason attempts to
discover had occurred at the time of Socrates, who realized that
the existence of genuine limits to what is knowable by reason
opened up the possibility that our world, instead of having the
kind of intelligible necessities that science seeks to uncover,
could be the work of mysterious, creative gods or god as devoutly
religious citizens claimed it to be. His grasp of this great
difficulty led him and his students ancient and medieval to attempt
to ground the life of reason by means of a pre-philosophic,
preliminary investigation of political-moral questions. Modern
political philosophers later attempted to ground the life of reason
in a considerably different, 'enlightening' way. These essays
examine both of these attempts to answer the question of the right
life for human beings, as those attempts are introduced and
elaborated in the work of thinkers from Homer and Thucydides to
Nietzsche and Charles Taylor. The volume is divided into five
parts. The essays in Part I examine the moral-political problems
through which Socrates came to ground the philosophic life as those
problems first appeared in earlier, pre-Socratic writers. Part II
explores those problems in their Platonic and Aristotelian
presentations, and in the work of two medieval thinkers. Part III
addresses the thought of Leo Strauss, the thinker upon whose work
the recovery of both ancient and modern political philosophy in our
day has been made possible. Part IV explicates the writings of
modern political philosophers and thinkers with a view to
uncovering their alternative approach to science and political
life. The volume concludes in Part V with essays addressing
contemporary problems enlightened by the study of political
philosophy.
Unlike many other books about the American founding, this new work
by two of the most prominent scholars of American political history
emphasizes the coherence and intelligibility of the social compact
theory. Social compact theory, the idea that government must be
based on an agreement between those who govern and those who
consent to be governed, was one of the Founders' few unifying
philosophical positions, and it transcended the partisan politics
of that era. Contributors to this volume present a comprehensive
overview of the social compact theory, discussing its European
philosophical origins, the development of the theory into the basis
of the fledgling government, and the attitudes of some of the
founders toward the theory and its traditional proponents. The
authors argue forcefully and convincingly that the political ideas
of the American Founders cannot be properly understood without
understanding social compact theory and the exalted place it held
in the construction of the American system of government.
In the far future, after a nuclear war, the world is separated into
two realms, each under the protection of the all-powerful
Commission. In Ecologia mammoths, wolves and sabre cats roam the
world of Stone Age people, while Economica is populated by modern
people enjoying technological convenience, complete with robots
that serve every need. In Ecologia the Commission is worshiped as a
deity, but in Economica it is resented as an obstructive and
unaccountable bureaucracy. When Peter finds a portal between these
realms, he illicitly sets up a life for himself in both worlds,
knowing that he is in danger. But like everyone else he has no idea
what the Commission really is, and when Peter's friend, Simon,
figures it out and is silenced by sinister forces, Peter's
questions about his future only become more complicated. His
quandary exacerbated by the imminent closure of the portal, Peter
has to make a choice about where he belongs; a choice that will be
the most important he's ever made. Raising questions about what we
mean by 'nature', 'humanity' and life itself, Destiny of a Free
Spirit is a compelling debut that will keep you guessing till the
end.
When the location of the Pearl of Corruption is discovered, the
evil Talishaire Empire invade the peaceful Kingdom of Hallan,
desperate to claim the powerful artifact. Countess Alyssa must find
a way to save her home from the corruption of the evil pearl while
Captain Arden must defend his nation against the armies of the
demon-possessed Two heroes, two paths, one destiny; saving their
home from the unrelenting forces of evil
This collection of essays, offered in honor of the distinguished
career of prominent political philosophy professor Clifford Orwin,
provides a wide context in which to consider the rise of "humanity"
as one of the chief modern virtues. A relative of-and also a
replacement for-formerly more prominent other-regarding virtues
like justice and generosity, humanity and later compassion become
the true north of the modern moral compass. Contributors to this
volume consider various aspects of this virtue, by comparison with
what came before and with attention to its development from early
to late modernity, and up to the present.
Al-Qaeda has a new leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri and he's no longer
prepared to send suicide missions. It's too costly and crude. Now
he intends for his fighters to survive and return as heroes and
future trainers for the cause. It makes for good propaganda and
fund raising amongst the rich Princes and families of Saudi Arabia.
Michael Burrows of the British SIS becomes aware of the terrorist
group and their yacht. Repositioning of a surveillance satellite
over the Arabian Sea produces an opportune picture of a clandestine
rendezvous between a surfaced submarine and a yacht. What he does
not know is the nature of the transfer between the two craft, is it
a person or perhaps industrial secrets, or something more sinister.
Michael correctly guesses the passage of the yacht through the Suez
Canal. However, he disastrously fails to track the yacht once the
terrorists enter the Mediterranean. Only after their first attack
is the hunt on for the terrorists before they can strike again.
In the autumn of 1973, a freshman "revolutionary" arrived on a
college campus, eager to finally engage in a war that he had only
watched from the sidelines. But the flames of protest were
guttering out and a new world was already taking shape. The
revolutionaries he had so admired were either dead or moving on.
The Vietnam War was winding to an inglorious close and even Richard
Nixon was teetering on the edge of resignation. An Acquired Taste
is the tale of young man adrift, a person who arrives far too late
to the party and finds himself suddenly among strangers. It is a
story of existential bewilderment, the kind we all experience when
our dreams are abruptly dashed against the rocky shores of reality.
Set in the present-day, DNA portrays a Britain occupied by
victorious German forces back in 1941. John McCarthy, an ageing
journalist working for Der Alemanne, goes looking for his missing
drinking buddy, Jimmy. With no one to help, he unwittingly seeks
out an old girlfriend, Bernadine Clarke, now a Chief Inspector at
the Met. She at first appears willing to help but things are not
all that they seem. Undeterred by his apparent lack of progress,
John persists in his search only to stumble upon the awful truth
behind recent police roundups.
A true story of victorious flat bottom to high is the limit.
The late John Beecher, though descended from the abolitionist
Beechers, grew up in Birmingham, where his father was a steel
industry executive. Beecher himself was groomed for a similar role,
but when he went into the mills as a young man during the Great
Depression, he rebelled and began to write powerful, radical,
activist poetry. A contemporary of Woody Guthrie and John
Steinbeck, he became a similar chronicler of the massive human
displacement of the economic upheaval of the 1930s. During World
War II, he served as an officer of the interracial crew of the
troop transport Booker T. Washington, and wrote a book about those
experiences. In the McCarthy era, he was blacklisted. And in the
civil rights era, he turned his attention to the evils of
segregation and the Ku Klux Klan. Always, he wrote powerful, spare
verse which in lesser hands might have been ruined by its outrage.
With his artist wife, Barbara, he published several elegant
collections of his poetry on his own hand-set letterpress. His
books included Report to the Stockholders, To Live and Die in
Dixie, In Egypt Land, and a 1974 Macmillan edition of collected
poems. All are out of print.
By the close of the twentieth century, the brilliant poets that had
emerged from the Americas included Ruben Dario, Pablo Neruda, Cesar
Vallejo, Vicente Huidobro, and Octavio Paz. To this list must be
added Jorge Carrera Andrade, an Ecuadorian, who spent his entire
adult life traveling as a diplomat, politician, and poet. Despite a
brief flurry of attention generated in the United States by his
book, Secret Country (New York: MacMillan, 1946), published just
after he served as Ecuadorian Consul General to the United States
in San Francisco, Andrade has since been forgotten by American
anthologists and literary critics. But in fact the late Andrade was
a leading figure in Latin American letters. This volume of his
poetry was selected and translated by Steven Ford Brown and is
presented in both Spanish and English.
Mencken's stinging characterization of the American South as
"the Sahara of the Bozart" reflects an understandable frustration
with the narrow view of the canon of southern literature. With its
focus on novelists, it largely ignores the works of all but a few
poets--the Fugitives Robert Penn Warren, Allen Tate, and John Crowe
Ransom, and the larger-than-life James Dickey among them. Invited
Guest is the first anthology that attempts to reach beyond this
small coterie to encompass the range and brilliance of
twentieth-century southern poetry. Editors David Rigsbee and Steven
Ford Brown have compiled the works of a richly diverse collection
of poets--all born or raised southerners.
Women and African Americans are recognized for their
alternative, subversive contributions to southern aesthetics; the
myopic, often scathing views of the New Critics or the overly
historicist agendas of identity politics are discarded in favor of
a middle ground that allows for inclusion on both aesthetic and
historical bases.
Along with a respectful acknowledgement of the contributions of
the most popular figures in southern poetry, Rigsbee and Brown
offer long-overdue attention to underrecognized poets such as Anne
Spencer, John Beecher, Eleanor Ross Taylor, and Alice Dunbar
Nelson. The juxtaposition of the canonical and the little-known
makes Invited Guest an intriguing illustration of the abundance and
range of poetry in the twentieth-century South.
After a century-long hiatus, honor is back. Academics, pundits, and
everyday citizens alike are rediscovering the importance of this
ancient and powerful human motive. This volume brings together some
of the foremost researchers of honor to debate honor's meaning and
its compatibility with liberalism, democracy, and modernity.
Contributors-representing philosophy, sociology, political science,
history, psychology, leadership studies, and military
science-examine honor past to present, from masculine and feminine
perspectives, and in North American, European, and African
contexts. Topics include the role of honor in the modern military,
the effects of honor on our notions of the dignity and "purity" of
women, honor as a quality of good statesmen and citizens, honor's
role in international relations and community norms, and how
honor's egalitarian and elitist aspects intersect with democratic
and liberal regimes.
After a century-long hiatus, honor is back. Academics, pundits, and
everyday citizens alike are rediscovering the importance of this
ancient and powerful human motive. This volume brings together some
of the foremost researchers of honor to debate honor's meaning and
its compatibility with liberalism, democracy, and modernity.
Contributors-representing philosophy, sociology, political science,
history, psychology, leadership studies, and military
science-examine honor past to present, from masculine and feminine
perspectives, and in North American, European, and African
contexts. Topics include the role of honor in the modern military,
the effects of honor on our notions of the dignity and "purity" of
women, honor as a quality of good statesmen and citizens, honor's
role in international relations and community norms, and how
honor's egalitarian and elitist aspects intersect with democratic
and liberal regimes.
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