Other chapters tackle the metaphysics of music, brain and body, the enigma of communication (songs) without words, music as an escape from reality, and several other broad topics.
Not exact matches
Anyway, last week, we talked about
Chapter 2 — «The Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Literature» — in which Enns
tackles the difficult question of how to understand the Bible as special and revelatory when Genesis in particular looks so much like
other literature from the ancient Near Eastern world.
We've already discussed
Chapter 2 — «The Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Literature» — in which Enns
tackles the difficult question of how to understand the Bible as special and revelatory when Genesis in particular looks so much like
other literature from the ancient Near Eastern world, and
Chapter 3 --- «The Old Testament and Theological Diversity» — which addresses some of the tension, ambiguity, and diversity found within the pages of Scripture.
These are just some of the «mathematical explorations» — some serious,
others delightfully trivial —
tackled by Cows in the Maze, a collection of 21 stand - alone
chapters that originally appeared as columns in Scientific American.
And in his final
chapter, Monbiot
tackles, and lays to rest, the four «messiahs» that
others believe can or will make the need to
tackle climate change moot: new fuel technologies, new cleaning technologies, Peak Oil, and the market mechanism of carbon offsets.
Finally, to mention Brexit one more time, is that the UK vote opened up a
chapter of a more honest discussion about xenophobia and
tackling the otherness of
others in the UK.
They seem to include added photos and
other features so you remain engaged in what you're learning, and since the type of study is self - paced that allows you to go back and revise a
chapter if there's something you were not too sure about before you
tackle the final exam... That's certainly something you would not get from a classroom!