Sentences with phrase «suggesting a book which»

Please can you suggest any books which give a picture of how the planet might be in fifty to a hundred years time if overpopulation and over-use of the world's resources continue as they are now?

Not exact matches

The thing about meaning is that it's best conferred by giving the topic personal relevance,» explains Page19, which suggests that for each new book you ask yourself what you hope to learn, how it might change your life, and why you should bother reading it.
As University of California Davis economist Ann Huff Stevens asserts in her contribution to the 2008 book Laid Off, Laid Low, «In recent years, a conventional wisdom has emerged, suggesting the extent to which U.S. workers and employers form long term relationships has deteriorated.»
The board — which suggested Trump ask Comey to resign a week before the inauguration — said Comey's book offers no new facts about his interactions with Trump except for his «moral and aesthetic contempt» for the president.
I like the format of this book because it lists questions, which you can practice yourself, and you can see suggested answers.
Instead of overburdening your mind with too many tasks, Benson suggests a technique adopted from Toyota's manufacturing process, which is also the title of his book.
Firms could do more to include women among their leadership, Krawcheck said, and she questioned an idea outlined in the bestselling book by Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg, «Lean In,» which suggested women push harder to get ahead.
But «cash positive» suggests they're booking sales faster than they're spending money, which is a positive sign.
When we suggested US Bancorp (NASDAQ: USB) to Squawk Box as our favorite large cap, that was because of the operational excellence as opposed to the stock price, which trades above 2x book value.
I do know that if I followed the guidelines of one liturgical commission, suggesting that I greet each penitent at the church doors with an open Gospel book and then lead a procession to a reconciliation room which looks more like an occasion of sin than a shrine for its absolution, the number of confessions in the middle of the metropolis where I serve would be severely reduced.
Borg is a liberal and I'd suggest to read a book which looks like a debate with the famous British theologian: N.T. Wright «who is Jesus» or something like that.
It tells the story of how Bell's 2011 book Love Wins, which suggested God might eventually win everyone to glory, killed the pastor's church - based ministry.
In his book Lost in the Cosmos: The Last Self - Help Book, Walker Percy suggests that the French verb bourrer, which means «to stuff,» is the source of the English word «boredom.&rabook Lost in the Cosmos: The Last Self - Help Book, Walker Percy suggests that the French verb bourrer, which means «to stuff,» is the source of the English word «boredom.&raBook, Walker Percy suggests that the French verb bourrer, which means «to stuff,» is the source of the English word «boredom.»
Some are suggesting a loose - leaf hymnal and book of readings and services which would permit tailoring by local churches.
It will suggest some of the considerations which enter into the choice of a method, and will then outline the main steps in the method to be used in this book.
Apart from Cafardi's book or my review of it, MacRae's letter suggests an important context from which to consider the 2002 sexual crisis on the basis of the statistics he provides about the New Hampshire state prison population.
Perhaps also this book not only may throw light on the fundamental purposes by which education should be directed, but may at the same time suggest the outlines of a relevant and mature faith for modern man — a faith that grows directly out of the daily struggle to make responsible decisions.
In this first book he inquires into the significance of the terms (or, as Ross suggests, «linguistic facts» [AR 26]-RRB-, in which propositions are couched.
In her book Pure Lust, which is an elemental feminist philosophy, Daly discusses separatism in relationship to Be-Friending, a term which suggests the ontological status of female friendship.
Colson and Eckerd devote the bulk of their book, the fourth part, to suggesting ways in which the values by which people choose to live can be transformed.
As part of this late exercise in autodidactism, they suggested that I read various books — some of which were subsequently acquired — by formidable chess grandmasters including Nimzowitsch and Alekhine and others who left permanent stamps on the game.
Beyond my desire to address specific theological issues and to suggest directions in which evangelicals might profitably move, I have attempted to give voice in this book to a more basic and persistent concern.
What escapes Mollenkott is the fact that the hermeneutical principle she enunciates does not suggest dismissing a passage because of «the hardness of our hearts,» but rather reevaluating it with fresh, exacting, detailed research seeking a thread by which the «book hangs together.»
In his recent book, Life, Liberty, and the Defense of Dignity, he offers «four benefits» of mortality: interest and engagement, suggesting that adding, say, twenty years to the human life span would not proportionately increase the pleasures of life; seriousness and aspiration, proposing that the knowledge that our life is limited is what leads us to take life seriously and passionately; beauty and love, presenting the idea that it is precisely their perishability that makes, for instance, flowers beautiful to us, just as the coming and going of spring makes that season all the more meaningful; and, finally, virtue and moral excellence, by which he means the virtuous and noble deeds that mortality makes possible, including the sacrifice of our own life for a worthy cause.
In her book The Body of God, theologian Sallie McFague goes further, suggesting that the combined influence of post-modem science and Christian faith requires the construction of a new model in which we see the universe as the body of God.12
I shall not speak here about this, my own views on the matter may be found in a little book written some years ago, Praying Today (Eerdmans, 1974), in which an effort was made to meet some of the problems and answer some of the questions that personal devotion may suggest.
Why has a book about Jesus (Zealot by Reza Aslan) which suggests he was nothing more than a rabble - rouser shot straight to the top of the bestseller charts...
And if the church is going to join Jesus in this task, some of the radical changes which have been suggested in this book may be necessary.
The remainder of this book will be given to further and detailed development of the definition just suggested, to the ways in which we may pray in words and in thought, to the place of prayer in public worship and above all in the Holy Communion or Lord's Supper — which all Christians save the Quakers and the Salvation Army know to be the central act of public worship, however much they may sometimes slight that importance in church practice — and finally to see how it all «fits in» — how faith and action are related to, and find fulfillment in, prayer both private and public.
Great but I am not happy with laws which are being soft dealt with against crime activities... therefore suggest to be dealt with as the Holy Books of God states...
The speech that follows, placed upon the lips of Samuel as a farewell address, suggests some kinship in point of view with that which characterizes much of the book of Deuteronomy.
Taking up where the book on Wiltshire Church left off, this chapter suggests ways by which the congregation itself might, comprehending its own story, better understand its nature, circumstances, and mission.
Nevertheless, recent developments in the scientific culture, especially as we see them reported in books like James Gleick's Chaos: Making a New Science, suggest that Snow's greatest mistake was his failure to take into account the extent to which the literature of science is literature itself, which has all along anticipated much of what science ultimately spells out in its own terms — terms that have often enough seemed invidious to literature.
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.
(the best theological book of the last ten years, though not written by a theologian), Arnold Toynbee suggests that those three religions of revelation which spring from a common historical root — Judaism, Islam, and Christianity have a tendency toward exclusivism and intolerance.
Many couples find it freeing to read together a book which suggests ways of increasing the adventure and playfulness of sex — for example, those by Alex Comfort, James McGary, and the Hunts in the Bibliography.
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.
may be seen as the central question for both the bishops and the contributors to this book, which explains why both are woefully inadequate in suggesting how poverty can be substantially curtailed.
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 document of at least semiofficial status, the reply of the English Archbishops to Leo XIII, describes the Prayer Book service in terms which suggest the point of departure of modern liturgical piety:
At the beginning of the fourth book of the Institutes, in which he deals with the church, Calvin likens the church to a mother and he suggests that no one can be a Christian unless he gives himself continuously into her care.
Another one of Campbell's studies, which he chose to omit from his book, showed that wheat gluten can create similar results to the casein protein — suggesting that perhaps a complete amino acid profile, regardless if it's plant or animal sourced, promotes cell growth, and those can be healthy cells or cancer cells.
Which dough from your gluten free book would you suggest I use for a King Cake?
The photo in the book suggests serving the Hummus Chicken Salad in lettuce cups or wraps, which looked delicious.
In reference to using a bread machine on delayed setting, my book suggests NOT doing so if EGGS are used (which may spoil).
Many gardening books suggest that windows are good places to germinate pepper seed and to grow seedlings, which simply is not true.
I did suggest earlier this week that this season was one about which to be optimistic — there were a few Doubting Micky Thomases judging from the posts that followed such thoughts, but after a display of stunning attack, biting midfield (well, kind of, at least the two stayed out of Mike Dean's book) and innovative defending, surely we are now favourites for the title?
In other works, reinvent yourself within your marriage by reinventing the marriage itself — which is, of course, what divorce therapist Susan Pease Gadoua and I are suggesting in our book project, The New I Do.
I'd like to suggest 5 simple criteria by which you can evaluate every birth blog (or message board or book).
The suggested waiting time, which Ferber charts in his book, is based on how comfortable you are with the technique, how many days you've been using it, and how many times you've already checked on your child that night.
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