Sentences with phrase «history books suggests»

The Labour leader may be having an anaemic summer, but a look at the history books suggests he remains the man to beat in 2015l.
In fact, history books suggest that BMW was keen on making the Range Rover even more luxurious while doing away with a low - ratio gearbox and other four - wheel drive paraphernalia, which it thought was unnecessary.

Not exact matches

The book - loving billionaire regularly uses his posts to suggest must - read titles, generally on science, history, and economics.
I would suggest you open a history book if you truly believe this country is based on the Christian faith.
A friend who taught Church history suggested I read George Herbert's book The Country Parson and the Temple (Paulist Press).
(ENTIRE BOOK) The author examines the history and context of the Ten Commandments, and suggests their relevance in today's world.
In the Introduction to his book he mentions, «It will be suggested in this book that the founders of the Church were «East Syrian'traders, from the Persian Gulf area, and it will be apparent that a most important feature of its history is the succession of contacts with foreign Christians, drawn to the Malabar coast by trade.»
The Bible is unique because it suggests as no other book can that God has engaged in history with living human beings, who were inspired to convey their knowledge of God to others, actively expressing themselves in their given historical epochs and cultures.
I suggest you crack open a few History and Science books to start with.
I suggest that for your better understanding you start watching the history channel 2 or buy yourself a few books concerning the matter and educate yourself.
This book, which on its face seems to have been motivated by the old - timer's urge to reminisce by means of the biographical genre, is actually a fine work of history, and in the end its author is unafraid to suggest that the work of history is itself an enterprise of devotion, a kind of spiritual work.
I would suggest a book called the god makers, and another called no man knows my history.
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.
He more explicitly takes up the arguments of liberals within the mainline church who suggest that conservative histrionics over the inclusion of homosexuals are no different from the resistance to racial or gender inclusiveness or to revision to the Book of Common Prayer (indeed, conservatives on the issue of homosexuality are in some regrettable company in recent history).
Here historical criticism is of some value, in that it can suggest that the New Testament books were written in and for a community by men who were members of that community, and that this community, originating in the work of Jesus, has a history which extended beyond his resurrection and, indeed, beyond the apostolic age.
A cursory glance at the table might suggest that this final day has very little to offer, and a quick glance back through the history books confirms that there hasn't been a final day so apparently lacking in drama since... oh, hang on.
Enter Mr. Mann, who suggested that both the history books and other historical temperature data were wrong.
If you're a beauty lover or even just someone who is generally interested in culture and history then I highly suggest adding this book into your collection.
Teachers, find suggested Facing History resources and tools that tie into each book recommendation to build upon and expand your lessons.
With physical bookstores in English - language markets in «terminal» decline, a small number of companies with «no history with books» dominating the consumer book market, and «insane» pricing of books and e-books, the free market had gone too far, suggested the man who oversaw the rise and fall of Borders in the United Kingdom, Philip Downer.
History The Walla Walla, Washington, newspaper digs into its archives for a story about a city commission formed in 1949 to review comic books and make recommendations to their publishers for cleaning them up; the group suggested that 93 comics be banned.
Logic and history both suggest that if we are to see genuine innovation in interactive stories — real innovation in the interaction with characters, I mean, not prettier zoomable images — that will come from the tech people hiring in the writing talent, not by book publishers moving into tech.
Suggested reading: All of our kayak tours carry a small library of field guides and local history books, including many listed below.
I suggest you try book a week - long holiday, so you have enough time to explore the fascinating slave trade history of the island, play a round of golf, and get some down time too.
For the first time in the series» history, Corpse Party: Blood Drive will be released physically in North America through a limited «Everafter Edition» for a suggested retail price of $ 49.99, containing a two - disc compilation of songs from Corpse Party, Corpse Party: Book of Shadows, and Corpse Party: Blood Drive, as well as a «Dying Art» grimoire featuring over 100 pages of artwork from throughout the franchise.
Of course, while the original period of the so - called «Conceptual Artists» may be consigned to the history books, countless artists incorporate conceptual approaches into their work today — suggesting that the legacy of movement chronicled by Lippard continues to extend and evolve around the globe.
Some artists and their work do not fit succinctly into such categories, and some movements were not as neatly packaged as art history books would suggest.
The book concludes with an interview with seven international curators and suggested readings for further consideration of the history of curatorial practice.
Black - and - white photos in history books, documentary films, and microfilm of front - page newspaper stories shaped my understanding of the period, suggesting a more or less linear sequence of events.
The frontpage implies that climate science to date has not been «real,» while the many errors made by the speakers as well as their serious credibility issues (Willie Soon's infamous paper, another paper more recently with Noah Robinson that made up data, Spencer's flawed book on climate sensitivity, Singer's history since about 1990, Schmitt's uncorrected error in a NASA paper, Bast and Taylor's lies in defense of Schmitt, and so on) suggest the opposite — the speakers at the ICCC are the ones attempting to falsify the science.
I just can't understand (and it angers me) how Mooney is invited to give talks everywhere and invited onto the AGU Board of Directors and held up as some master communicator when he's so extremely politically biased, and to boot knows absolutely nothing of the science — and now his new book is actually suggesting that conservatives are somehow medically or psychologically deficient for believing «more wrong things» (that's a quote from his book advertisement), and not just in science but also in history, economic policy, and foreign policy!
If you haven't read Winchester's highly accessible history of the making of the dictionary, let me suggest it as your next airplane or bedside book.
Even Amazon, when suggesting a new book for you, explains what it saw in your previous purchase history that triggered the recommendation.
After speaking with the candidate, Laura Smith - Proulx, award winning resume writer and author of three books (How to Get Hired Faster, Solve Your Toughest Resume Challenges and Finding Your Next Job with LinkedIn), knew there was far more to Park's career history than his resume suggested.
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