Sentences with phrase «human authors in»

Just wanted to add a couple of resources that I am finding immensely helpful on my journey to independent publishing: one is Kristen Lamb's http://warriorwriters.wordpress.com/ site about all things writing and her book Rise of the Machines: Human Authors in a Digital World, all about author marketing in the modern age.
Enter Kristen Lamb, social media Jedi and author of Rise of the Machines: Human Authors in a Digital World.
If you need to learn about craft or building an author platform, I suggest her classes and her book, Rise of the Machine - Human Authors in a Digital World.
But in this essay he has extended critical contextualization by highlighting the fact that the Bible itself was written by human authors in their own particular local cultures.
However, a Bible written by human authors in their socio - cultural contexts all too easily becomes a human and cultural book instead of the inerrant Word of God.

Not exact matches

Analogous effects in small to large animals, including humans, «are likely to be found,» the authors conclude.
«All of those founders had originally left to bring in a more professional leader or CEO - type,» notes Vince Molinaro, Managing Director for Leadership Solutions at Knightsbridge Human Capital Solutions and author of The Leadership Contract.
Author and CEO of HR Capital Source Jac Fitz - enz said in his 2010 book titled The New HR Analytics: Predicting the Economic Value of Your Company's Human Capital Investments, «Talent managers» ability to maximize HR's value is now married to their ability to talk in understandable terms.»
Turkle is the author of «Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other» and «Reclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in a Digital Age,» among many other books on human relationships to technology.
the author of Anatomy of Love: A Natural History of Mating, Marriage, and Why We Stray (Ballantine Books, 1994) can tell us precisely what happens in the human brain when we fall madly in love.
«We suspected that the young are most vulnerable because of their immature immune systems, but we didn't have a lot of hard evidence to show that before,» said study lead author Bo Hang, a Berkeley Lab staff scientist who previously found that thirdhand smoke could lead to genetic mutations in human cells.
«We've always known that caffeine has cognitive - enhancing effects, but its particular effects on strengthening memories and making them resistant to forgetting has never been examined in detail in humans,» Yassa, senior author of the paper, told Johns Hopkins» news network.
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.»
Here's a very partial list: tech icons (founders of Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Craigslist, Pinterest, Spotify, Salesforce, Dropbox, and more), Jimmy Fallon, Arianna Huffington, Brandon Stanton (Humans of New York), Lord Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Ben Stiller, Maurice Ashley (first African - American Grandmaster of chess), Brené Brown (researcher and bestselling author), Rick Rubin (legendary music producer), Temple Grandin (animal behavior expert and autism activist), Franklin Leonard (The Black List), Dara Torres (12 - time Olympic medalist in swimming), David Lynch (director), Kelly Slater (surfing legend), Bozoma Saint John (Beats / Apple / Uber), Lewis Cantley (famed cancer researcher), Maria Sharapova, Chris Anderson (curator of TED), Terry Crews, Greg Norman (golf icon), Vitalik Buterin (creator of Ethereum), and nearly 100 more.
Social business strategist and author, Bryan Kramer, implores business owners to stop thinking in terms of B2B or B2C and instead, take a H2H (human - to - human) approach to communications.
The rules on the content that's allowed on television, particularly children's television, should extend to YouTube, which is soaking up more and more of young people's screen time, says Keen, author of the upcoming book How to Fix the Future: Staying Human in the Digital Age.
Oh what a beautiful letdown: to exhale and surrender to the author and father of our being; to look eternity in the eye and know that you've seen her before; to be fully human and only human, alive to the sunset and the tail - lights, fearfully and wonderfully made.
Marriage is a reality authored by God in his very act of creating the human race.
His father was the famed children's author A.A. Milne, who named the lead human character in his Winnie the Pooh books after his son.
The author (s) of this story lacked perspective on their calendar, or maybe they wanted to debunk astronomical principles of order in favor of making the statement that God made all that is in the universe in one «work» week a nice juxtaposition between divine and human potential to get things done.
The author, professor of systematic theology at St. John's Seminary in Brighton, Massachusetts, does a splendid job of introducing the series, addressing such topics as natural law, principles of human action, the determination of the moral good, and the connection between virtues, gifts of the Holy Spirit, and the Beatitudes.
He criticizes textualism (a mode of judicial interpretation) by citing the author's attempt to «show how lawmakers are engaged in the creative work of ensuring that natural law... is given effect in our human living.»
One atheistic author has written an entire book about these many thousands of passages in the Bible in which God blesses, causes, commands, or sanctions violence against human beings (Steve Wells, Drunk with Blood: God's Killings in the Bible).
Evolution and the Fall is a collection of essays from a multi-disciplinary and ecumenical group of authors, which sets out to address «a set of problems that arise from the encounter of traditional biblical views of human origins with contemporary scientific theories» (p. xv)-- not, one might add, in general, to answer them.
Since the Bible is written in human words, the books it contains have many human authors from many eras and cultures.
Finally, in the «sadness» category, I am disheartened that there's an almost universal disparaging in this thread of those who happen to be published authors and / or speakers, as though this by default makes us The Man and incapable of basic human compassion.
... as you stated in another post «By inspiring the human authors to write what they did, God made it look like He was the one responsible for the actions of Israel, the destruction of the flood, the murder of the firstborn males of Israel, and the slaughter of Canaanite women and children.
God superintending human authors so that, using their own personalities, they composed and recorded without error his message in the words of the original manuscripts.
But it is also a human word: the human beings who wrote it were also true authors.8 The scriptures therefore share to some extent in the nature of the incarnation: they use human things as the means for God to communicate with us humanly.
That work of the Holy Spirit in guiding human authors to compose and record through their personalities God's selected message without error in the words of the original documents.
The authors should be applauded for engaging honestly and thoughtfully with the scientific evidence in their search for an understanding of human nature which is consistent with the experimental evidence.
The author holds that the most unequivocal way in which Wesley was liberal was in his insistence on human participation in the process of salvation A second respect in which Wesley was clearly liberal in his own time was his attitude toward those with views differing from his own.
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 terms of answers about why the bible says what it does sometimes, recognizing that the bible has human authors can provide one straightforward explanation: people can be assholes.
The authors discuss the evolution of the human brain, the importance of language, and compare human intelligence to that found in other animals.
Finally, drawing mainly from the thinking of contemporary Calvinist and Lutheran theologians, the authors discuss the implications of recent scientific research on theological views about the human being as a creature made in the image of God.
He inspires the human authors to write about Him in these ways so that He can paint the outline, or picture (Greg calls it a shadow) of what Jesus will do for all humanity on the cross.
Leon R. Kass is Addie Clark Harding Professor in the College and the Committee on Social Thought, The University of Chicago, and author of Toward a More Natural Science: Biology and Human Affairs and The Hungry Soul: Eating and the Perfecting of Our Nature.
Eliade, who was for many years at the University of Chicago, will be familiar to most readers as the author of the four - volume A History of Religious Ideas and numerous other books dealing with religion and myth in human history.
The human capacity to author life and skip all over the genetic alphabet raises theological questions, just as does the human capacity to destroy life on a grand scale and actually put ourselves, for the first time, in a position to be uncreators.
Ms. Lernoux, author of Cry of the People: The Struggle for Human Rights in Latin America, is a free - lance writer based in Bogota, Colombia.
If there is any proposition upon which great minds have agreed throughout history, from Plato to Einstein and Whitehead, from Zoroaster, Ikhnaton, Moses, Isaiah, Jesus, Paul, the authors of the Vedic hymns, Confucius, Lao Tse, to many recent Indian and Japanese writers, it is that human life is not adequately interpretable in merely human terms.
In Bulfinch's Legends of Charlemagne, published in 1867, the author blandly and uncontentiously numbers these works «among the most cherished creations of human genius,» some knowledge of which «is expected of every well - educated young person.&raquIn Bulfinch's Legends of Charlemagne, published in 1867, the author blandly and uncontentiously numbers these works «among the most cherished creations of human genius,» some knowledge of which «is expected of every well - educated young person.&raquin 1867, the author blandly and uncontentiously numbers these works «among the most cherished creations of human genius,» some knowledge of which «is expected of every well - educated young person.»
On the contrary, every time a biblical author sketches the eschaton, humans are on earth using various kinds of cultural goods, cooking meals, living in houses, walking on roads, raising banners, blowing trumpets, using domesticated animals, sitting on chairs, reading books, and so on.
It is built upon the Burkian assumption that «the human situation created in literature is essentially dramatic» and devised as an analytical tool for students who would become «speakers» of an author's aesthetic text.
The authors report on the results of a survey of scientists and theological educators, asking about their belief in a God who intervenes in human affairs.
God Himself, of course, is always loving and just, but sometimes the human authors of Scripture confused the true God as revealed in Jesus Christ with the actions of Satan in history, and referred to the actions of both as coming from «Yahweh.»
«It should also be made quite clear that Gadhafi was no more of a Muslim leader than Slobodan Milosevic or Robert Mugabe should be considered to be Christian leaders,» said Arsalan Iftikhar, an international human rights lawyer and author of «Islamic Pacifism: Global Muslims in the Post-Osama Era.»
In a recent book I read (Engaging the Powers), the author suggested that such a response is natural in light of the ever - increasing tide of natural catastrophes and human tragedies that are paraded before our eyes on Television and the Newspapers on a daily basiIn a recent book I read (Engaging the Powers), the author suggested that such a response is natural in light of the ever - increasing tide of natural catastrophes and human tragedies that are paraded before our eyes on Television and the Newspapers on a daily basiin light of the ever - increasing tide of natural catastrophes and human tragedies that are paraded before our eyes on Television and the Newspapers on a daily basis.
As the author notes in the beginning, this volume is not intended as a homily, but rather as a companion; and like a trusted companion, it does not simply conduct a one - sided soliloquy over history and texts, but behaves dynamically: telling stories, empathizing with human frailty, and anticipating questions.
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