Sentences with phrase «modern book about»

Does a veggie burger have a place in a modern book about vegetarian food?

Not exact matches

(The development is also not a big surprise given that Ansari cowrote a book about dating in the digital era, «Modern Romance.»)
A comparable crossover is about to happen with Bruce Feldman's new book, The QB: The Making of Modern Quarterbacks.
Wolff's other books include, TELEVISION IS THE NEW TELEVISION, a look at the war between old media and new; AUTUMN OF THE MOGULS, about the men who transformed the modern media business; and BURN RATE, his now - classic memoir of the early internet years.
Modern science is the cornerstone of your belief system, as ancient writings that I consider to be God given, holy inspired and very relevant to modern times (as well as every society that ever was and will be) is the cornerstone of my belief system, because everything about this book has been accurate in every way, unlike modern scModern science is the cornerstone of your belief system, as ancient writings that I consider to be God given, holy inspired and very relevant to modern times (as well as every society that ever was and will be) is the cornerstone of my belief system, because everything about this book has been accurate in every way, unlike modern scmodern times (as well as every society that ever was and will be) is the cornerstone of my belief system, because everything about this book has been accurate in every way, unlike modern scmodern science.
Folman's adaptation attempts to update some of the themes of Lem's book to fit our modern obsession with entertainment, but the original novel is more about the use of psychotropic drugs to create a dream world in which everyone thinks himself happy.
``... as ancient writings that I consider to be God given, holy inspired and very relevant to modern times (as well as every society that ever was and will be) is the cornerstone of my belief system, because everything about this book has been accurate in every way, unlike modern science.»
Accordingly, this book offers readers interested in the history of political theory and in the roots of the modern European project much to think about.
He had drawn heavily upon Benedict's moral theology in his latest book and thought the former pope understood the modern world with rare insight and knew how to speak about it.
It's a book about the gospel,» I said, «about how modern Christians have misunderstood it to be all about personal salvation, when it's more about the story of Jesus.»
What I found most encouraging about the book is that Matt Casper, the Atheist, had many of the same critiques of modern «churchianity» as I do.
I always attributed this disconnect to my general frustrations with modern evangelicalism — that it's been hijacked by the Republican Party, that it's in a perpetual state of defensiveness and «wartime» posturing, that it has closed itself off to science and independent thought, that it has lost sight of the message of Jesus regarding the Kingdom of God, that it has become commercialized and shallow — all the things we «emergers» like to write books and articles about.
due to racism, bigotry and ignorance, most modern historical books in the west do not or have not mentioned such historical facts bc for white men who compiled history books, any credit to any area east of Greece would have been too shameful, but again, when you read about ancient Persian culture and see it in action and look at their tablets and beliefs and artifacts and books, it's quite clear that the Persian Zoroastrian role is all over this....
Whitehead evidently read Aristotle (or perhaps W. D. Ross's book about Aristotle) with the specter of modern materialistic mechanism haunting his mind, and thought he recognized in Aristotle's «substance» its remote but unmistakable ancestor.
(ENTIRE BOOK) Twelve basic affirmations of our Christian faith as each relates to modern man are discussed: What we believe about God, Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit, the Bible, Man, Sin, Experience, Perfection, the Church, the Kingdom of God, Divine Judgment and Eternal Life.
BOOKS ABOUT WHITEHEAD»S THOUGHT Emmet, D. M., Whitehead's Philosophy of Organism, Macmillan, 1932 Johnson, A. M., Whitehead's Theory of Reality, Dover, 1952 Whitehead's Philosophy of Civilization, Dover, 1958 Lowe, Victor, Understanding Whitehead, Johns Hopkins, 1962 Peters, F. H., The Creative Advance, Bethany, 1966 BOOKS ABOUT PROCESS - THEOLOGY Hamilton, P. N., The Living God and the Modern World, Hodder & Stoughton, 1967 Hartshorne, Charles, Man's Vision of God, Harper, 1941 James, Ralph F., The Concrete God, Bobbs - Merrill, 1968 Ogden, Schubert, The Reality of God, S.C.M. Press, 1967 Pittenger, Norman, Process - Thought and Christian Faith, S.C.M. Press, 1968
Her book was refreshingly un-abstract and densely empirical, built upon an accumulation of lovingly rendered details about what works and doesn't work in modern city life.
Here is a book that undertakes to say what «modern» has meant and why, and that gives us a chance to think about what it will mean to leave that...
Amid various modern fantasies about her, one can also find books by scholars.
Having considered the development of Whitehead's thought about God in Science and the Modern World and in Religion in the Making, we now turn to the most important book which he wrote, Process and Reality.
But he's also become one of the more controversial figures in evangelicalism after releasing the book Love Wins, which challenged conventional, modern understandings about hell and the afterlife.
17 Eric Mascall, in a review of W. Richard's book, Secularization Theology, in The Thomist, 32 (1968), pp. 106 - 115, says that «existentialist theology is out of harmony with what modern science tells us about man.»
It is significant that from the second century to the nineteenth, when modern historical scholarship became current, theories about the Bible were held which no competent historian now accepts, such as that Moses wrote the entire Pentateuch (the first five books of the Old Testament) including the description of his own death.
And of course, popular author and speaker Eric Metaxas published a book just last year that, in part, catalogues modern - day miracles that happen around the world (And RELEVANT talked with him about it).
This book shows modern children in the magnificent setting of St Peter's, meeting a real pope and asking the questions that we all have about some of the big mysteries of our religion.
Strickland normally speaks and writes on topics such as human trafficking and modern slavery, so it may seem odd for someone with such gravitas in the Christian faith to stop to write a book about a TV show.
However, modern scholarship does not always support the conviction of the early Church about the authorship of New Testament books.
The book isn't intentionally profound, and it's occasionally very misguided — but the description of what people claim they want (a soul mate) and how they go about securing it (Tinder) does reveal something profound: Modern romance is complicated because the ends, the means, and our expectations of relationships all conflict.
In the book, she writes about her journey away from the upward mobility trend of modern American, and down into the grime of life where, as it turns out, life is beautiful and full of wonder, glory, and grace.
This book is about the major theological themes in the Book of Revelation and how modern readers can understand and apply this difficult book to our lives tobook is about the major theological themes in the Book of Revelation and how modern readers can understand and apply this difficult book to our lives toBook of Revelation and how modern readers can understand and apply this difficult book to our lives tobook to our lives today.
That book was a somewhat scholarly approach to what the Bible says about the world that many modern, Western people ignore: the spiritual world.
You probably have a list of scriptures (the same ones I once used) for this purpose, but if you look at them honestly they do not mention the Bible, but rather «the law», writings of «men of old», «the Word of God», «this book», «this prophecy», «the scripture» or other specified or unspecified writing (s)-- NOT ONE says «the Bible» or can be reasonably interpreted to refer to the Protestant or Catholic canon WE moderns mean when we talk about «the Bible».
Islam in Modern History, by Wilfred Cantwell Smith, is a study of what is happening to Islam in a time of rapid transition; it is a thoughtful, sometimes disturbing, book which should be read by anyone who is teaching about Islam.
Whitehead's ideas about education are contained in Whitehead, Alfred North, The Aims of Education and Other Essays (New York: A Mentor Book, The New American Library of World Literature, Inc., 1963), and in the final chapter of his Science and the Modern World (New York: A Mentor Book, The New American Library of World Literature, Inc., 1956), Chapter XIII, «Requisites for Social Progress,» pp. 192 - 208.
This has been a book about prayer, intended for modern men and women who find difficulty not only in seeing how prayer is possible but in understanding what it really is.
Having read about Indian philosophy, the next step is to read some of the sources, and for that Charles A. Moore of the University of Hawaii and Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, India's philosopher President, have provided A Source Book in Indian Philosophy, a carefully selected collection of representative philosophical writings from Vedic to modern times.
I thought Evangel readers would appreciate knowing about my Christianity Today interview with James Davison Hunter, Professor of Religion, Culture, and Social Theory at the University of Virginia and author of To Change the World: The Irony, Tragedy and Possibility of Christianity in the Late Modern World (Oxford, 2010), which promises to be the most important book written on Christian cultural engagement in the last 50 years.
The preface to a recent collection of articles by psychologists and psychiatrists notes that «the Kübler - Ross book was the beginning of a frank and vivid discussion about the implications of death in our modern society» (The Interpretation of Death, edited by Henrik M. Ruitenbeek [Jason Aronson, 1973]-RRB-.
She sounds like a typical conservative critic of modern academia, except that she's complaining about this kind of thing in scholarly books on sexual «kink,» particularly bondage and sadomasochism.
His new book, All Things New: A Revolutionary Look at Heaven and the Coming Kingdom, challenges the basic precepts of modern Christian thinking about the afterlife.
Wrong about that: «Her books have sold nearly 100 million copies, making her one of the most widely read authors in modern history.»
The KJV didn't edit out anything, any 20 books or what have you; even if it did, it wouldn't matter, because we could see it, since modern archaelogists have found various manuscripts in Israel, Egypt, and the Sinai penninsula of the complete Bible dating from 250BCE to 350CE, which the KJV translators didn't even know about.
One of the things Newey spoke about in his recent book, How To Build A Car, was how sad modern F1 had become in that there's so little scope for genuine innovation.
Adam Gopnik — like his pieces on France and the French — writing about Houllebecq (whose new novel is out) and Eric Zemmour (a French TV journalist with a book of diatribe against modern France) in the latest New Yorker, brings up Football: «The result of the new free market in football is that French footballers, like Thierry Henry and Arsene Wenger, have become heroes in North and West London».
I am a huge fan of time - limited, renewable marital contracts, which actually have a long, sometimes successful, history, and devote a chapter to it in The New I Do: Reshaping Marriage for Skeptics, Realists and Rebels (in fact, our contract was used by Mandy Len Catron to draft a relationship contract with her partner, which she wrote about in a Modern Love essay and her new book, How to Fall in Love With Anyone).
I have begun reading sociologist Eva Illouz's 2012 book Why Love Hurts and while I haven't gotten too far into it, and thus will likely have a lot more to say about, Illouz says the modern world, with its deregulated of marriage markets and freedom to choose one's own partner has, made the search for love an «agonizingly difficult experience» that leads to collective misery and disappointment, which is then internalized by people — especially women — as a personal failing.
Even the title of her book, «One Big Happy Family: 18 Writers Talk about Polyamory, Open Adoption, Mixed Marriage, House Husbandry, Single Motherhood, and Other Realities of Truly Modern Love ``, doesn't fit within the usual parameters.
In our book, Minimalist Parenting: Enjoy Modern Family Life More By Doing Less, my co-author Christine and I go into detail about chores for both younger and older kids — why they're so important (and why it's never too late to begin), which jobs to delegate, and how to get started.
We talk about decluttering your home, schedule, and mental space without getting bogged down by perfection or expectations — expanding upon what we wrote about in our book Minimalist Parenting: Enjoy Modern Family Life More by Doing Less (Routledge, 2013).
The book «Anxious Parents: A History of Modern Childrearing,» describes polls in the 1930s in which parents ranked their long lists of worries and describes the 20th century as a «century of anxiety about the child and about parents» own adequacy.»
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