The posts you read here aren't from one «guru,» because no one writer can be an expert in all the challenges of
the modern writing world.
Not exact matches
It manages to turn a less - than - scintillating - sounding subject — our aging electricity grid — into compelling reading, he claims,
writing that even those who have never spent a minute pondering how the lights come on will leave this one understanding «that the electrical grid is one of the greatest engineering wonders of the
modern world» and «why modernizing the grid is so complex and so critical for building our clean - energy future.»
According to the mystery man, «the basic institutions of the
modern world — the U.S. government, the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund — were all a front,»
writes Lawson.
Dig Deeper: An Eye Bank Bets on Best Practices How to Become a Social Entrepreneur: Think of It As a Business «The
modern non-profit must adopt many of the same strategies, policies and best practices employed by successful enterprises in the for - profit
world, but not at the cost of its soul,»
writes Scofield.
«The emergence of these «
modern spice routes» is great news for businesses the
world over,» says David Marcus, PayPal's president, in a
written statement.
One of the journal's more interesting features during this pre -
World War I period was a column called «
Modern Womanhood»
written by the Century's first female editor, Ida Withers Harrison.
Lian Xi, a professor of
world Christianity at Duke Divinity School, has
written extensively about China's
modern encounter with Christianity.
Even if in the earlier book the envisaging had been attributed to God, the situation would not have been changed, since Whitehead
wrote in Science and the
Modern World that «God is not concrete (SMW 257.)
The
modern philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein expressed the same thought when he
wrote: «Not how the
world is, is the mystical, but that it is».
The delightful surfaces of the
world — which Stevens
wrote about the way
modern painters daubed them, in «Blue, gold, pink, and green» — were the proper subject of poetry, and our delight in them was all we could possess of heaven.
His «
modern world» is a white, male, technocratic
world, and the global phenomenon of nonwhite Pentecostalism had barely begun when Bultmann was
writing.
This situation is nowhere more clearly described in
modern literature than in the novels of Franz Kafka: «His unexpressed, ever - present theme,»
writes Buber, «is the remoteness of the judge, the remoteness of the lord of the castle, the hiddenness, the eclipse...» Kafka describes the human
world as given over to the meaningless government of a slovenly bureaucracy without possibility of appeal: «From the hopelessly strange Being who gave this
world into their impure hands, no message of comfort or promise penetrates to us.
Prophecies such as Daniel 2 (which secular scholars suggest was
written around 200 BC) shows the rise and fall of the major
world empires of the Middle East and Europe from Babylon, to Media Persia, to Greece, Rome, and then the division of Rome into it's separate kingdoms which became
modern Europe.
Now let us have a cloose look at
modern man or say Politics Today where you drop all that behind and do as Personal Interests with out any commitment verbal or written Just Buy and Sell at Sale they Trade with the Fate, Faith and destiny of World and New Worlds Nations and that is why no conflict ever settled among nations but getting even worse and Modern Prophets of Inspiration and Knowldge Remind and Warn of World Food and Waters about Famine in the world and the need for working agianst that otherwise nations would become as Live Zombies eating each other
modern man or say Politics Today where you drop all that behind and do as Personal Interests with out any commitment verbal or
written Just Buy and Sell at Sale they Trade with the Fate, Faith and destiny of
World and New Worlds Nations and that is why no conflict ever settled among nations but getting even worse and Modern Prophets of Inspiration and Knowldge Remind and Warn of World Food and Waters about Famine in the world and the need for working agianst that otherwise nations would become as Live Zombies eating each other f
World and New
Worlds Nations and that is why no conflict ever settled among nations but getting even worse and
Modern Prophets of Inspiration and Knowldge Remind and Warn of World Food and Waters about Famine in the world and the need for working agianst that otherwise nations would become as Live Zombies eating each other
Modern Prophets of Inspiration and Knowldge Remind and Warn of
World Food and Waters about Famine in the world and the need for working agianst that otherwise nations would become as Live Zombies eating each other f
World Food and Waters about Famine in the
world and the need for working agianst that otherwise nations would become as Live Zombies eating each other f
world and the need for working agianst that otherwise nations would become as Live Zombies eating each other flesh.
The English philosopher Alfred North Whitehead
wrote in his Science and the
Modern World (1925) that without devotion to the God of Israel, modern science would not have come into
Modern World (1925) that without devotion to the God of Israel,
modern science would not have come into
modern science would not have come into being.
Reinhold Niebuhr, for example,
wrote an exuberant review of Science and the
Modern World in which he saw Whitehead's philosophy as «exactly the emphasis which modern religion needs to rescue it from defeat on the one hand and from a too costly philosophical victory on the
Modern World in which he saw Whitehead's philosophy as «exactly the emphasis which
modern religion needs to rescue it from defeat on the one hand and from a too costly philosophical victory on the
modern religion needs to rescue it from defeat on the one hand and from a too costly philosophical victory on the other.
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.
Here is the sheer miracle of it: a literature that long antedated our glorious gains in science and the immense scope of
modern knowledge, which moves in the quiet atmosphere of the ancient countryside, with camels and flocks and roadside wells and the joyous shout of the peasant at vintage or in harvest — this literature, after all that has intervened, is still our great literature, published abroad as no other in the total of man's
writing, translated into the
world's great languages and many minor ones, and cherished and loved and studied so earnestly as to set it in a class apart.
Vatican II's Constitution on the Church in the
Modern World, a document the Pope helped write, offers a description of the Catholic attitude towards the modern world as one of solidarity with the whole human f
Modern World, a document the Pope helped write, offers a description of the Catholic attitude towards the modern world as one of solidarity with the whole human fa
World, a document the Pope helped
write, offers a description of the Catholic attitude towards the
modern world as one of solidarity with the whole human f
modern world as one of solidarity with the whole human fa
world as one of solidarity with the whole human family.
Yet one more conviction links the one thousand columns, and in fact dates back to the earlier series of Catholic press columns I
wrote from 1979 until 1986: the conviction that the Catholic Church in the United States, for all its difficulties, is more likely to be the «Church in the
modern world» envisioned by the Second Vatican Council than any other local Church.
Today,
modern scholarship is translating and
writing commentaries on the great texts of the
world's religions at an unparalleled pace.
Stimpson
writes as a
modern woman who sees things are they really are: hence, on the subject of clothing she makes the point that a priest in a clerical collar is saying «Hey,
world, I'm a priest», and a policeman in uniform is saying «Hey,
world, I'm a cop».
«This book is made for need and profit of all good folk,»
writes Caxton in his Less
Modern English introduction, «as far as they in reading or hearing of it shall more understand and feel the foresaid subtle deceits that daily be used in the
world, not to the intent that men should use them, but that every man should eschew and keep him from the subtle false shrews that they be not deceived.»
In Science and the
Modern World, pp. 115 - 16, Whitehead
wrote: «The concrete enduring entities are organisms, so that the plan of the whole influences the very characters of the various subordinate organisms which enter into it.
After the completion of Science and the
Modern World Whitehead's thought went through a long period (1925 - 1929) of even more rapid development and generated a series of metaphysical positions that were all abandoned or modified almost as quickly as they were
written down — all, that is, except the final metaphysical position.
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.
In consequence of this method, and of the reasoning leading to it, practically the whole of Science and the
Modern World was
written from a point of view that Whitehead abandoned when he discovered, or so Ford alleges, the need for temporal atomicity.
Similarly, in God and Religion in the Posts -
modern World, Griffin writes, «God could not possibly be the sole possessor of creative power, and can not interrupt or unilaterally control events in the world» (5, italics ad
World, Griffin
writes, «God could not possibly be the sole possessor of creative power, and can not interrupt or unilaterally control events in the
world» (5, italics ad
world» (5, italics added).
He had also
written a long critical notice of Science and the
Modern World for Mind (N.S. xxxv pp. 489 - 500, 1926).
If people want to isolate words
written long ago and live by them, if they choose to live according to a doctrine of hatred, then they only prove my skepticism of what Christianity really means in the
modern world.
By the time he
wrote Science and the
Modern World, he had come to see that the basic issue was that of the physical existent, how it was to be conceived.
In Science and the
Modern World, Alfred North Whitehead
wrote of the scientific materialism stemming from the seventeenth century:
This is the line taken by what in North America today is frequently described as «process thought»; its greatest exponent was the late Professor Alfred North Whitehead in his works Process and Reality (his book has been re-arranged, and provided with excellent explanatory notes by D. W. Sherburne, under the title of Key to Whitehead's Process and Reality), Science and the
Modern World, Modes of Thought, Adventures of Ideas, Religion in the Making, and Symbolism, all of them
written after Whitehead had joined the faculty of Harvard University in the United States in the 1920's.
RB: When I
wrote my review of Science and the
Modern World I found no reference in Whitehead to language.
Although Whitehead does not explicitly use the phrase «relativity of simultaneity,» a denial of absolute simultaneity is clearly implied; it is in complete agreement with what he
wrote in Science and the
Modern World, where the existence of «the unique present instant» is explicitly denied:
Wouldn't it be nice, he
writes, «if all of that eerily unsettled rural countryside were instead dense with diversified 100 - acre farmsteads, with their grain and hay rotations, livestock and pastures embedded in a landscape of protected forest, wetland, and prairie,» and in turn supporting an infinity of small villages, connected to the
world via all our
modern communications pipelines so that people could work at a variety of jobs, but remain connected to the real
world by sheer immersion in a particular landscape.
(Science and the
Modern World, New York: The Free Press, 1967, 178) At that point his development (the
writing of Science and the
Modern World), he felt he had said what one could say about God from a metaphysical point of view.
A progressive intellectual
writes an immensely popular book of
modern biblical criticism, showing that God's Word, properly understood, calls for
world peace and the unity of religion.
I am
writing a book on colic, looking at how women in different parts of the
world deal with colic, and also at
modern studies that explore various causes and solutions.
-LSB-...] honour of
World Doula Week I thought I'd share a blog
written by Wonderwear
Modern Diaper Service (guest -LSB-...]
Nevertheless, this is a superbly
written, witty and sometimes picturesque - even picaresque - journey though the
modern world.
I will risk the worst pun in the
world by
writing that faced with the most rebellious party in
modern times he'll need all the goodwill he can get.
The evidence suggests that an intercontinental, networked
world isn't just a
modern invention, Lawler
writes.
Historians tend to be suspicious of anything that would be called a grand narrative, yet even some of them have recently made an effort in a field called
world history, starting with the beginning of
writing or agriculture or even anatomically
modern humans.
«Einstein's ideas,» his friend the physicist Max Born
wrote over half a century ago, «have given the physical sciences the impetus which has liberated them from outdated philosophical doctrine, and made them one of the decisive factors in the
modern world of man.»
In this beautifully
written memoir, Elizabeth Gilbert describes how she made the difficult choice to leave behind all the trappings of
modern American success to follow her heart and travel the
world, searching for meaning.
She started in the business
world, focusing on cross-cultural communication and technical
writing, and is now infusing the teachings of yoga with
modern life, blending two of her passions... yoga and
writing.
WAPF founder Sally Fallon Morell and Dr. Kaayla Daniel
wrote a book about broth called Nourishing Broth: An Old - Fashioned Remedy for the
Modern World.
Adwoa Aboah
writes her inaugural monthly column for British Vogue's January issue Model - of - the - moment Adwoa Aboah starred on the cover of Edward Enninful's debut issue of British Vogue, and for his second edition, the activist's
writing takes center stage in a monthly series for the magazine that addresses how young women navigate the
modern world.
The fashion
world is not too preoccupied with showing your body though, the sportswear fall 2018 is about layers, puffy jackets, turtlenecks, warm materials and has a
modern yet retro ski resort vibe
written all over it.