Sentences with phrase «books suggesting what»

Experts have come up with books suggesting what is good for a pregnant woman and what foods she should avoid in case of pregnancy.
Hammond's essays in this book suggest what some of those conditions are.

Not exact matches

That jibes with what Stewart suggests, that certain kinds of books — genre stuff like fan fiction or romance — work better digitally, but print is still a more desirable way to digest the really good meaty writing.
The thing about meaning is that it's best conferred by giving the topic personal relevance,» explains Page19, which suggests that for each new book you ask yourself what you hope to learn, how it might change your life, and why you should bother reading it.
To determine just what constitutes a key asset or skill within an industry, David A. Aaker in his book, Developing Business Strategies, suggests concentrating your efforts in four areas:
It's no shock that reading with kids is good for their intellectual development, but if you want them to get more out of books, blog Dumb Little Man suggests actively engaging your kids about what their reading.
Even so, the Beige Book, compiled during the first half of the third quarter, suggested that the speed of the recovery was falling short of what was needed to spur faster hiring.
Finding value stocks — stocks that trade for less than what their book values suggest they should, or stocks with low P / E ratios and other metrics — is one way to find stocks with potential.
Winston Churchill refused to listen to wealth advisors» advice and often acted contrary to what they suggested, according to David Lough, a private banker of long standing who has recently published a book entitled No More Champagne: Churchill and His Money.
Once you have digested the theory behind link building and the suggested ways of assessing what type of link assets you have and need, the next step is to make use of the tools and templates provided with the book to help get you started with your campaigns.
What I would suggest you do is, book 50 % profits at these levels and raise the stops on the remaining positions and watch for a day or two.
And Artigas» book suggests, to this reader at least, what some of those questions might be.
For those who are lost, and don't know what's the diff between Biblical Christianity and Roman Catholicism, may I suggests 2 book that explains it, one is Far From Rome Near To God by Richard Bennett and Martin Buckingham and second is The Gospel According to Rome by James McCarthy.
I don't know what your viewpoint is on someone being gay and a Christian, but let me suggest that you read his book before you talk about the «choice» Wesley Hill made to be gay (he didn't), or how his father was abusive or absent (he wasn't), or how Wesley should just «man up» and fall in love with a woman (he's tried), or get «cured» by reading the Bible and praying more (he probably reads the Bible and prays more than you or I).
Many of these posts are rough drafts from sections of the book I am working on, and I actually propose later that churches do what you have suggested here.
The myth of the divine consummation (found in books like Revelation in the New Testament and suggested by the picture of resurrection, as well as by the «last things») is an assertion that the divine purpose can not fail, that God will take into the divine self what is achieved in the world, and that in some fashion, obviously beyond our imagining, God will be disclosed as all in all.
What escapes Mollenkott is the fact that the hermeneutical principle she enunciates does not suggest dismissing a passage because of «the hardness of our hearts,» but rather reevaluating it with fresh, exacting, detailed research seeking a thread by which the «book hangs together.»
Beckett's apparent insistence, later in the book, on the importance of Catholic sympathies (e.g. in Shakespeare and Samuel Johnson) suggests apologetics, not aesthetics, and reminds one uncomfortably that arguing the case for reasonable faith and faith - based reason is tremendously difficult without straying into what appears to be a partisan position.
Everybody wants to do what is right in their own eyes and frankly, I am growing weary of media statements that suggest «well, everybody knows that the Bible is just a book of myths and that it's irrelevant, etc.» as though everyone accepts this as understood.
In his recent book, Life, Liberty, and the Defense of Dignity, he offers «four benefits» of mortality: interest and engagement, suggesting that adding, say, twenty years to the human life span would not proportionately increase the pleasures of life; seriousness and aspiration, proposing that the knowledge that our life is limited is what leads us to take life seriously and passionately; beauty and love, presenting the idea that it is precisely their perishability that makes, for instance, flowers beautiful to us, just as the coming and going of spring makes that season all the more meaningful; and, finally, virtue and moral excellence, by which he means the virtuous and noble deeds that mortality makes possible, including the sacrifice of our own life for a worthy cause.
We doing some of what has been suggested in this book, we are not closing down the church, but allowing it to rise up and follow our Master and Commander Jesus Christ into the fray once more.
The book suggests ways that Muslims may liberalize Islam through what she calls «operation ijtihad,» an ambitious initiative that would empower more Muslim women economically, align Islamic human rights codes with those of the modern world, reform radio and television outlets, create a less militant paradigm for the relationship between mosque and state, incorporate more democracy into the Muslim world and allow for engagement in interfaith activity.
I mention this because I feel that the overall theme of this book is exactly what you are discussing in this post so if anyone reading this post wants to learn more I suggesting looking into the book.
The Book of Proverbs, abounding in antithetical parallelism, is just what the name suggests — a collection of pungent adages.
This is what Paul calls himself in Romans 1 (a great book in the Bible, I suggest you read it!).
I want to spell out some of the underlying principles that are assumed in the book and to suggest the audience that is most likely to be interested in what I have to say.
Nevertheless, recent developments in the scientific culture, especially as we see them reported in books like James Gleick's Chaos: Making a New Science, suggest that Snow's greatest mistake was his failure to take into account the extent to which the literature of science is literature itself, which has all along anticipated much of what science ultimately spells out in its own terms — terms that have often enough seemed invidious to literature.
In Ogden's book there is a chapter called «The Promise of Faith» and I should like to commend it to you, for it seems to me that with a rather different approach, yet much more adequately, Ogden says in it much that I have been trying to suggest in what I have been putting before you.
It is suggested that to get an idea of the liberal temper that pervaded the early twentieth century, one need only to read A. Hamack's book, What is Christianity?
(On this point, I suggest chapter 1 of Leon Kass» marvelous book The Hungry Soul: Eating and the Perfection of Our Nature, especially his criticism of the saying «You are what you eat.»
Which suggests that it always took sophistication, even on the frontier where books were few, to work one's way across history, to forget what today we call hermeneutics and to claim to be replicating, restoring, repristinating, the pure norms of early Christianity.
To gain a better perspective of what and why institutional church has not only let you down, but is not biblical, I suggest you read a book called Pagan Christianity, by Frank Viola and George Barna, and the follow - up books as well.
I am endeavoring to complete a book on health as I have not only reversed diabetes for myself but gained optimal heath along the way and I will be sure to refer the San Francisco Salt Company as part of what I suggest as there definitely is a difference in salts.
You could use agar powder instead but it is hard to find unbleached, you use 1/3 of what you need with the flakes but always test it like I suggest in my book.
Elneny was everywhere he was the boss of the midfield he ran after the ball he closed down players very well I do nt know what match you were watching but I suggest you watch it again and keep an eye on elneny and what he is doing debuchy was commanding and even took a yelow for the team have a look at the stats and how many balls we intercepted and how many fowls the game was pure tactics west ham had no chance this is the level of football for me it is top level because you go out there you control the game you boss it you win it for me the team effort was 100 % the work rate was 100 % and if you want to learn football this match is a text book match to observe learn and execute
I bought books about sexless marriages, read them (they said nothing useful, only suggested what I had already tried), and left them laying around in hopes he might read them himself.
In other works, reinvent yourself within your marriage by reinventing the marriage itself — which is, of course, what divorce therapist Susan Pease Gadoua and I are suggesting in our book project, The New I Do.
Her book is designed to help couples create a parenting plan — just as we suggest in The New I Do — to help them get on the same page about their children and to understand what drives our behavior, and our partner's behavior, when it comes to the childhood we want to give our children.
I was afraid of what friends would think if they saw bottle paraphernalia on my registry; that I might be setting myself up psychologically for failure, or giving my baby «nipple confusion» (an inability to go from artificial nipple to actual nipple) as some of the breastfeeding books had suggested.
He was trained after the first day of doing what you suggest in the book.
Local sling library — When someone first suggested a sling library to me I didn't have a clue what they meant, I was honestly picturing a building full of books about slings (yes I know, idiot).
If you're unsure what to pack, we suggest an activity style colouring book, plain paper, crayons, pencils, stickers and favourite toy like a doll or car.
What about the research by Mark Cummings, reported in Po Bronson's book Nurture Shock, suggesting that parents just need to make up in front of the child?
I was able to pick and choose from what they suggested as well as do my own research (books / internet) and listen to what my gut was telling me.
Dr. Ferber suggests doing what you need to do to get your child to sleep — such as rubbing her back or reading her an extra book — bearing in mind that you'll have to undo what you did once you get home.
This book is exactly what the title suggests, how to incorporate play into your parenting.
What I have learned so far is that I'm doing about half of the things suggested in this book already.
For as much as Churchill's Secret War seems to zero in on decisions taken by the war - time prime minister and his adviser Lord Cherwell, the racism and sheer odium of both of whom is on stark display in the evidence presented by Mukerjee, this book is much more of an indictment of what colonialism was really about than the title suggests.
What it's done is balance the books by state aid and by dipping into reserves, which to me doesn't suggest that the city budget is really sustainable.
The impression from the papers today and over the last few days is that Ed Miliband is under attack from the Blairite «right» of the Labour Party: David Miliband's leaked victory speech (what might have been, if he'd won), the Telegraph files showing Ed Miliband and Ed Balls plotted to bring Blair's government down, the serialisation of a new booking suggesting the Milibands» relationship has broken down...
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