Sentences with phrase «in later books as»

Nature is a theme prevalent in later books as well, including Flute's Journey: The Life of a Wood Thrush and How the Groundhog's Garden Grew.
In the later Book as in the earlier, the word sweeps the gamut from breath soul, which was its origin, to interior spiritual life and character, which was its culmination.

Not exact matches

She was the latest attraction on the block intended as a piece of eye candy for the onlookers to admire, but in the end, Sue Storm fell way short of her heroic comic book status.
A lot of the people I advise as a coach or whom I interviewed for my latest book, Overworked and Overwhelmed, keep visual focal points before them to help them remember what they're in it for.
Bezos's values have remained constant since Amazon's debut as an online book retailer in the late 1990s.
He experienced it again in the late 1990s when he wrote a book that considered the potentially liberating power of Web 2.0 (before it was actually known as that).
Countless books and articles were written about it, but only «The Smartest Guys in the Room» holds up a decade later as the definitive narrative.
As Disney was wrapping up production on A Wrinkle in Time, the latest film from lauded director Ava DuVernay and an adaptation of the beloved children's book, out Friday, the production team reached out to Rodeo FX to add finishing touches on a selected scene.
In his latest book, Economism: Bad Economics and the Rise of Inequality, former technology executive and current University of Connecticut business law professor James Kwak argues that the lessons of Economics 101 have transcended their role as a useful framework to begin understanding economics, and instead have become something close to an ideology.
As the comic strip grew to thousands of newspapers by the late 90s, Adams continued to expand his horizons, serving as co-owner of Stacey's Caf in Pleasanton, California, and having written a variety of books, including two number one New York Times bestsellerAs the comic strip grew to thousands of newspapers by the late 90s, Adams continued to expand his horizons, serving as co-owner of Stacey's Caf in Pleasanton, California, and having written a variety of books, including two number one New York Times bestselleras co-owner of Stacey's Caf in Pleasanton, California, and having written a variety of books, including two number one New York Times bestsellers.
«I know somewhere in the heavens she's designing the latest and greatest trends and has her art book she always carried with her as well,» she wrote.
Bank's loan book up tenfold since 2012 but, as consumers struggle to pay, will it be punished for piling in to credit so late?
As of the latest FDIC global capital index in mid-2017, the price - to - book ratio for the largest U.S. banks (the 8 designated as global systemically important banks, or G - SIBs) averaged 1.28, up by 50 % since the end of 201As of the latest FDIC global capital index in mid-2017, the price - to - book ratio for the largest U.S. banks (the 8 designated as global systemically important banks, or G - SIBs) averaged 1.28, up by 50 % since the end of 201as global systemically important banks, or G - SIBs) averaged 1.28, up by 50 % since the end of 2012.
The podcast later served as the inspiration for her debut book, Work It: Secrets for Success from the Boldest Women in Business.
This would later surprise me, because I thought of myself as a tuned - in reader, especially when it comes to personal finance books.
Liberal MLA Mary Polak (Langley) was instrumental as a Surrey School Board trustee in banning gay - positive books from Surrey Schools: The book ban was later struck down by the Supreme Court of Canada which said «instead of proceeding on the basis of respect for all types of families, the Board proceeded on an exclusionary philosophy, acting on the concern of certain parents about the morality of same - sex relationships, without considering the interest of same - sex parented families and the children who belong to them in receiving equal recognition and respect in the school system.»
Instead, records show that hundreds of tourists and vacationers have been booking one - and two - night stays in the building since late 2015 using short - term rental sites such as Airbnb.
If for example your broad match keyword is «book,» users typing in terms such as «used book» or «latest books» will be shown your ad.
«Adam Smith» probably wouldn't be surprised to know his book is still just as relevant fifty years later because in The Money Game, he references...
Some experts, such as Ray Kurzweil in his book The Age of Intelligent Machines, first published in the late 1980s, got it spectacularly right.
As Kevin Kelly, co-founder of Wired, writes in his latest book New Rules for the New Economy, «The great benefits reaped by the new economy in the coming decades will be due in large part to exploring and exploiting the power of decentralized and autonomous networks.»
This book describes the experiences of the author as a recruit and bond seller with Salomon Brothers during the late 1980's - an important period in the history of Wall Street.
With a record quarter on the books and no signs of funding slowing down, join the Director of StartUp Health Academy as she shares the latest market trends and advances in digital health technology and what's in store over the next quarter, next year, and 10 + years from now.
Good point Jack, but the «book» that muslims follow, regardless of training or translation, gives Christians chills because it places the dispensation of Jesus: «Love thy neighbor as thyself» under and beneath the later dispensation of Muhammed which in fact harks back to the old testament, earlier Hebraic tribal codes.
Even at a young age, even in church as a child and then young adult and later as a mature adult, I remember feeling uncomfortable with the «level» to which everything, from SS literature to popular books, were always written.
The title of Metaxas» latest book, If You Can Keep It (Viking), is a reference to Benjamin Franklin's response to a woman who asked him, as he left the Constitutional Convention in 1787, «Dr Franklin, what have you given us, a monarchy or a republic?»
The then - atheist professor Lewis read The Everlasting Man in the mid-1920s and later described the book as a major contribution to his journey away from atheism and his conversion to theism.
These theological visions come from many sources, including: apocalyptic books of the Bible from Daniel to Revelation; a nineteenth - century viewpoint on the end of times known as dispensational premillennialism; and images of the so - called «rapture» popularized in novels such as Hal Lindsey's The Late Great Planet Earth (1970) and the more recent Left Behind series.
Considering that story wasnt even created until a few hundred years after the supposed «ressurection», and the fact that the story exists only in your fable book (also compiled, and edited hundreds of years later), I do nt think claiming it to be true is the same as, you know, being true.
And those entries have not been published in later editions of the book — not as a «white - washing,» but simply because they're not «Mormon Doctrine.»
I took this from a discussion of Jesus» bloodline that is in wikipedia - «Differing and contradictory versions of a Jesus bloodline hypothesis have been promoted by numerous books, websites and films of non-fiction and fiction in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, which have almost all been dismissed as works of pseudohistory and conspiracy theory.
Her latest novel, The Handmaid's Tale (Houghton Mifflin, 1986), is commanding attention as a considerably more ambitious book, part of a new phase of her work that includes the poems in True Stories and the novel Bodily Harm (both published in 1981) Exposing male / female power games within an alarmingly widened field of vision, Atwood bears prophetic witness to the largest, most subtle and most violent manifestations of power in our time.
Later, I did a whole series on «Gospelism» (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6) in which I argue many of the points that Scot McKnight made in his book, but which he referred to as «Gospeling.»
• Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis, The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas: Speaking of books in Portuguese, one might as well add one by the towering genius of Brazilian letters, who did everything that would be attempted by «surrealist» or «magical realist» or absurdist writers a century later, and did it all much better; The Posthumous Memoirs is as fantastic and exuberant and hilarious as any of his works, and is also surely the best novel written in the voice of a deceased narrator.
You also have to consider how many additions were made to the very original books that eventually were ruled in as canon hundreds of years later.
Louis Bouyer, himself one of the great Christian humanists of our own age, wrote in 1959 a book about Erasmus and his times that remains as good an introduction to later Christian humanism as any I know; another good introduction is the book by Henri de Lubac about the times of Pico della Mirandola.
As we have seen, the books of the Old Testament, in their complete form, were composed in the prophetic period or later, and bear the stamp of the prophets upon them.
The New York Times took note of it, (later profiling her) and a Village Voice sex columnist wrote in a back - cover blurb for the book: «As a single woman myself, Dawn's given me a lot to think about.»
Our «early traditions about Jesus» (to use the title of a little book by the late Professor Bethune - Baker) are not interested so much in what has been called the «biographical Jesus» as they are concerned with what Jesus did and said as he was remembered by those who believed him to be their Lord, the Risen Messiah, and who were therefore anxious to hand on to others what was remembered about him.
But just as God guided the writing of the original manuscripts, He also guided the copying of these manuscripts (and later, the selection of which books should be included in the Bible) so that we can know with certainly that the Greek and Hebrew copies we have today are 99 % accurate to what was originally written.
Ever since the publication in 1903 of Wilhelm Wrede's famous book on this subject, The Messianic Secret in the Gospels, scholars have been compelled to take seriously the thesis it set forth, namely, that the whole conception of the secret Messiahship is an intrusion into the tradition, either read into it by Mark or at a late pre-Marcan stage in the development of the tradition, and not really consonant with the story of Jesus as it was handed down in the earliest Christian circles.
True, the concepts, and the terms used to express them, are of great importance, especially for the later history of doctrine; and we are not likely to minimize them if we view New Testament theology as Book One or perhaps Chapter One in the History of Christian Doctrine.
Werner Jaeger, who has written the classic history of the idea of paideia, [2] pointed out in a later book on Early Christianity and Greek Paideia that Clement not only uses literary forms and types of argument calculated to sway people formed by paideia but, beyond that, he explicitly praises paideia in such a way as to make it clear that his entire epistle is to be taken «as an act of Christian education.»
Journalist Peter Seewald became famous for his books written in collaboration with Joseph Ratzinger, later Benedict XVI: what began as one interview for a major German newspaper developed into a series of books over a number of years, exploring deep theological issues and the complex debates of our time.
As he wrote earlier in this chapter, any use of the test as «a substitute for searching conversation» about world view / setting and the other dimensions of narrative explored later in the book was in his view more likely to yield a mechanist reduction than a deepened symbolic understandinAs he wrote earlier in this chapter, any use of the test as «a substitute for searching conversation» about world view / setting and the other dimensions of narrative explored later in the book was in his view more likely to yield a mechanist reduction than a deepened symbolic understandinas «a substitute for searching conversation» about world view / setting and the other dimensions of narrative explored later in the book was in his view more likely to yield a mechanist reduction than a deepened symbolic understanding.
During the debate over «biblical inerrancy» that raged among evangelicalism for several years in the late 1970s, I remember someone observing that Harold Lindsell's 1976 book, The Battle for the Bible, which pretty much got that debate going, was more a theory of institutional change than it was about theology as such.
Most of the text below is taken from: (Later in the book, Marcus Borg explains the meaning of the language as understood biblically and by the early church)
But it was also true that before the printing press, the scrolls (and later the handwritten books you had access to in your library) varied, as did the order in which you chose to keep them on your shelves.
Back in 2013, I joked that Greg Boyd stole my book, but then about a year later, as I heard more about his book project, I realized that Greg Boyd and I were not quite saying the same thing after all...
Karen Armstrong, in her book, Islam: A Short History, states that in the early days, (Women) did not seem to have experienced Islam as an oppressive religion, though later, as happened in Christianity, men...
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