Sentences with phrase «author of a chapter of»

The story made a number of wildly false claims about Weaver, including that he had refused to contribute to the latest IPCC report, even though Weaver was a lead author of a chapter of the report.
Mr Teske was also one of the authors of the chapter of the IPCC report that looked at those 164 scenarios, and that chose Energy [R] evolution as one of four scenarios to explore in more detail.

Not exact matches

Flexibility is one of the principal attractions for parent entrepreneurs, but the authors sound a note of caution in the early chapters.
The most interesting chapters of The Two - Second Advantage deal with attempts to take that human predictive ability and to blend it with real - time computing — as the authors have it, to design and build predictive systems that put «Gretzky's brain in a box.»
I have been following most of these contributing authors for years, and can definitely recommend the expertise in this book (disclaimer — somehow I was invited to contribute a chapter as well!)
Michael Hyatt, author of, Platform: Getting Noticed In A Noisy World, believes social media frauds are so abundant these days, he included a chapter in his book dedicated to warning unassuming readers.
She is the author of two books, Steering a New Course and Two Billion Cars (with Daniel Sperling), and has contributed book chapters in edited volumes.
Brian authored the «Canada» chapter of this report which aims to provide interpretations of existing regulations concerning Crowdfunding in Europe, North America, and Israel.
Ms. Bloxham is also the author of the Governance chapter in The Investor Relations Guide (published by Kennedy publications) and the Board chapter in Business Valuation Resource's Guide to Healthcare Valuation and the author / co-author of over 100 articles published by, among others Corporate Board Member, Directors Monthly, Directorship Magazine, International Finance and Treasury, Bank Accounting and Finance, American Banker, National Underwriter, Valuation Issues, Shareholder Value Magazine, CFO Magazine, Corporate Finance Review, the Wharton Leadership Digest, the Journal of Strategic Performance Measurement, Executive Talent, and the Journal of Cost Management.
Because the author is outside of the story, she can read over an event and then go back to the preceding chapters and drop in clues or accentuate the pathos of the characters.
Why an author would write a narrative account, and then later (near the end of the entire supposed «defense», in chapters 20/21) state «but these are written that you might believe X, Y, and Z»?
The authors of individual chapters are seasoned scholars whose prose has been edited into a mellow whole.
In chapter two, Luke (the author of this letter) gives Theophilus an understanding of what Christ followers did in community:
Given the author's remarkable learning, most readers are likely to learn a great deal, especially when he uses Augustine's sermons as source material; but the captious tone and prosecutorial zeal of the effort starts to grate as early as the first chapter.
The author has simplified the Table of Contents so that it lists only the four main chapters, saving the subdivisions for the beginning of each chapter, closer to their explanations.
But in fact the author of that chapter was not concerned with the scientific problem of the origin of species.
While it would be too much to say he hates the Bishop of Hippo (the book's concluding chapters concede a grudging admiration for the man's greatness), the author clearly wants to bring all his erudition (which is considerable) to the task of deconstructing his subject's reputation.
Dark, an acquaintance of mine and fellow Zondervan author, really struck a cord in the first chapter, where he says, «We feel pressure to believe — or pretend to believe — that God is love, while suspecting with a sinking feeling that God likes almost no one.»
How do you say someone's work is based on this one princliple when there are 9 chapters including clearity and inerrency of the bible, Attributes of God, Trinity, Creation, Sin preceeding the «major point» of all the author's works and belief system?
The strength of the book is not only in the story that is told, but in the facts, statistics, and reports that the author includes at the end of each chapter.
God is the author of the bible and I find it much harder to take things out of context if we read and study a book line by line and chapter by chapter.
Built having read some of the greatest Christian authors of all time, James is a one chapter per day companion to your daily Bible study and devotion.
In this chapter, the author refines the thesis that a theological school is a community of persons trying to understand God more truly by focusing its study within the horizon of questions about Christian congregations.
In this chapter the author proposes courses of study unified by designing every course to address the overarching interest of a theological school and pluralistically adequate by designing every course to focus on questions about congregations.
In this chapter the author prepares the reader to deal better with the rest of the book by carefully defining the concepts of «pluralism,» «understand,» «action,» and «practice.»
Murray observes in the last chapter that «human beings acting in a private capacity if restrained from the use of force have a remarkably good history» (author's emphasis).
In this chapter the author names two quite different models of excellent schooling.
There are a number of useful early chapters on the historical context of the debate between science and religion, where the authors juxtapose and compare the differing positions taken by various prominent psychologists / neuroscientists during the last century.
In the final chapter, the author quotes a line from one of Tolkien's letters: «The Lord of the Rings is of course a fundamentally religious and Catholic work.»
The meaning of this chapter has been made «incarnate» by the author in a specific sequence of letters of a code whose variability has allowed him to arrange them in the pattern you see before you.
Glance, for example, at the thirteenth chapter of Matthew, where the author of the Gospel has compiled a number of parables that were doubtless spoken on various occasions.
In a series of concise (and well «written) chapters, the author emphasizes the foreign policy continuity in the Bush «Clinton «Bush years.
Don't fall into that trap Jeremy Myers — this other person who wrote two chapters of similar stuff to you might simply be getting affected by the same authors you have, the same spiritual climate, the same Holy Spirit.
I challenge all readers to read the chapters preceding Isaiah 53 (chapters 41 thru 52) and you will see for yourself that the author of Isaiah is referring to the nation of Israel as the «suffering servant», not to the future messiah, and therefore, not to Jesus.
The authors devote an entire chapter to American Catholic teens to explain the «apparent relative religious laxity» of that group.
But the great objection to the argument advanced by Dr. Dodd is (1) the probability that Luke — that is, the author of Acts — had seen and used the Gospel of Mark before writing these early chapters of his «second volume»; if so, he would naturally have the pattern of Mark still in mind.
It is absolutely true to say that, if Archimedes had written a chapter of the Bible, the text would bear much greater evidence of the author's «omniscience.»
The authors are clearly aware that the subject matter is complex and have tried to make this a book for «the ordinary person in the pew», with simplified explanations and summaries at the end of each chapter.
In seven chapters, the author raises questions about belonging to a local church, observing the Lord's Supper, church leadership structures, tithing, preaching, worship, and the church building as the «House of God.»
«All mankind is of one author, and is one volume; when one man dies, one chapter is not torn out of the book, but translated into a better language; and every chapter must be so translated; God employs several translators; some pieces are translated by age, some by sickness, some by war, some by justice; but God's hand is in every translation, and his hand shall bind up all our scattered leaves again for that library where every book shall lie open to one another.»
The author discusses the metaphysical traits found in music based up his analysis of «universal principles» as found in Whitehead's chapter entitled «Abstraction» in Science and the Modern World.
The author's final chapters lay great stress on the work of the Holy Spirit in Christian healing; and many of the verses from the Bible that early AAs studied can be found cited by Hickson in these chapters — verses from the Gospels, from Acts, from James, from Corinthians, from Ephesians — and others dealing with the «gifts of healing.»
The book's sixteen chapters, all by different authors, treat such features of denominational life as campus ministry, church - related colleges, women's organizations, theological schools, and foreign missions.
The author describes those many meanings of shalom in this chapter.
Probably not all readers will agree with what the author writes in this chapter, for the whole matter of Christian perfection is very much disputed.
At the end of the previous chapter the reader was promised a statement of what the author believes about the nature of the kingdom of God.
In this chapter the author states that although predictions of war far outnumber predictions of peace, these references are not the last word.
(Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1997); E. W. Kenyon, In His Presence: The Secret of Prayer (Kenyon Publishing Society, 1999); E. W. Kenyon, Jesus the Healer (Kenyon Gospel Publishing Society, 2000); E. W. Kenyon, The Hidden Man (WA: Kenyon Publishing Society, 1998); E. W. Kenyon, The Wonderful Name of Jesus (Kenyon's Gospel Publishing Society, 1998); John Baker, Celebrate Recovery (CA: Celebrate Recovery Books, 1994); Bob and Pauline Bartosch, Overcomers Outreach: A Bridge to Recovery (La Habra, CA: Overcomers Outreach, 1994); Cathy Burns, Alcoholics Anonymous Unmasked (PA: Sharing, 1991); Cal Chambers, Two Tracks - One Goal (British Columbia: Credo Publishing Corporation, 1992); Martin M. Davis, The Gospel and the Twelve Steps (San Diego, CA: RPI Publishing Inc., 1993); Len C. Freeland, author of Chapter 28, «The Salvation Army» in (Alcoholism: The Total Treatment Approach, edited by Ronald J. Catanzaro IL: Charles C. Thomas Publisher, 1968); Mark H. Graeser, John A. Lynn, John W. Schoenheit, Don't Blame God: A Biblical Answer to the Problem of Evil, Sin and Suffering.
The first five chapters of the Wisdom of Solomon deal with the promise of immortality for those who are just, and the author attacked the view of those who, seeing no permanent meaning in life, decided to enjoy the good things of life while they could, no matter what suffering their self - centered actions might bring to others.
The remaining chapters are concerned with nineteenth — and twentieth — century historical precedents to the present situation, with personal and institutional renovation, and with distortions and dissimulations by such authors as James Carroll, Michael Phayer, Garry Wills, and Susan Zuccotti (writers of whom Mr. Dalin is also critical).
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