This is an abridged
version of an essay written before Jobs's death, first appearing in the Sept. 30 edition of The American, a publication of the American Enterprise Institute.
A version of this essay appears in today's edition of the Fortune Brainstorm Health Daily.
An earlier
version of this essay appeared in Environmental Ethics and Christian Humanism, edited by Thomas Sieger Derr and published by Abingdon, 1997.
An earlier
version of this essay appeared as part of a much longer article in the June 1996 issue of Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review.
An expanded
version of this essay is available from the Institute for Faith, Work & Economics in both digital and print formats.
Newman would do the same with his second
version of An Essay on the Development of Doctrine written over thirty years after the original.
The original German
version of these essays, which are the texts of various lectures given by the author (see note at the end of the book), has appeared in the sixth volume of Schriften zur Theologie (1965).
An earlier
version of this essay was given as a talk at a conference of the Skirball Institute on American Values in Los Angeles.
But we need to be careful not to emphasize certain truths of faith at the expense of others, a perennial temptation in the Church that I discuss in more detail in the original
version of the essay, forthcoming in Nova et Vetera.
A version of this essay was delivered as remarks to the Massachusetts Caucus of the March for Life on January 19, 2018.
(A
version of this essay first appeared on his blog.)
A version of this essay appears on the cover of National Geographic's March issue.
A version of this essay appeared in the Village Voice in January 1983.
A version of this essay appears in his most recent book, Age of Opportunity: Lessons from the New Science of Adolescence.
The unabridged
version of this essay is available in Martin R. West and Paul E. Peterson, eds., School Money Trials: The Legal Pursuit of Educational Adequacy, forthcoming from the Brookings Institution Press.
The unabridged
version of this essay is available in Martin R. West and Paul E. Peterson, eds.,
The unabridged
version of this essay is available in Martin R. West and
An earlier
version of this essay appeared in Peter Berkowitz, ed., Never a Matter of Indifference: Sustaining Virtue in a Free Republic (Hoover Institution Press, 2003).
(You can also access the PPT
version of this essay under Teaching Guides so that you can customize it for your classroom needs.)
A version of this essay will appear in Building Healthy Communities: A Focus on Boys and Young Men of Color (Christopher Edley and Jorge Velasco - Ruiz, eds.)
A thesis paper is a longer and larger
version of those essays we used to write during the high school or college days.
The work you submit for consideration should be the final proofread and edited
version of your essay.
Moreover, along with the final
version of an essay, you receive free plagiarism report proving originality of writing.
However, our professional custom writing services are introduced with the aim to help those students who have no time to conduct their own research, to find relevant sources, to write an outline, draft the paper, and edit the final
version of your essay.
Use a computer program spell checker for checking the latest
version of the essays.
Finally, you get a polished
version of essay edit)
But at the right, time I did not receive any paper I was really surprised to find out that it is the final
version of my essay.
A revised and improved
version of this essay appears in my book Monkee Music, available as paperback, hardback, PDF, Kindle (US), Kindle (UK) and ePub (all DRM - free).
A revised
version of this essay appears in my book The Beach Boys On CD.
Rules in Computer Games Compared to Rules in Traditional Games is now available as an updated and improved
version of this essay, presented in video form.
Notes An earlier
version of this essay was published in the book Avery Singer (Zurich: JRP Ringier, 2015).
The first
version of the essay, using the term support, appeared in Forum Lectures (Washington, DC: Voice of America, 1960).
Earlier
versions of this essay appeared in IINN PPEERRPPEETTUUAALL PPRROODDUUCCTTIIOONN, a newspaper published as part of SOLO SHOW, an exhibition by Robbie Williams at e-flux in 2013.
A version of this essay first appeared in The Chronicle of Higher Education.
He submitted an earlier, shorter
version of this essay to the Washington Post, in response to the 13 December article (climate scientists frantically copying data).
On this anniversary, I wanted to consider whether anything has changed and publish a freshened
version of the essay.
A version of this essay was originally published at Tech.pinions, a website dedicated to informed opinions, insight and perspective on the tech industry.
Not exact matches
Via Jonah Goldberg, I have more from Corey Robin on his original
essay, which is apparently the short
version of a longer academic article.
[A revised
version of the book, incorporating the material in the
essay, was published in German as Kerygma und historischer Jesus (Zurich: Zwingli Verlag, 1960).
Where Hopewell's notes dictated expansion, I complied only if I could find appropriate material in earlier
versions of the book or in his unpublished
essays.
The following is an edited
version of their conversation with Peter Chattaway, who has a forthcoming CT print
essay on 2014 Bible movies.
An earlier
version of this two - part
essay was delivered as the Joseph Gregory McCarthy Lectures in the Department
of Theology at Boston College, September 1993.
Transcriber's note: The following
essay is the transcribed
version of an address given by David Bohm at a conference organized by the Center for Process Studies.
His «stories» (one paragraph each) begin to sound like Reader's Digest condensed
versions of E. B. White's
essays.
This
essay will appear in slightly revised
version in The Phenomenology
of Prayer, edited by Bruce Ellis Benson and Norman Wirzba.
Process and Reality: An
Essay in Cosmology, published in 1929, is his
version of the ideal
of a»... necessary system
of general ideas in terms
of which every element
of our experience can be interpreted.»
Michael Oakeshott, who wrote two different
essays entitled «The Tower
of Babel,» observed that some
version of the myth «is to be found among the stories
of the Chinese, the Caldeans, and the ancient Hebrews, and among the Arab and Slav peoples, and the Aztecs
of Peru.
He has assisted in identifying and evaluating the critiques; he read and criticized an early
version of the Introduction; and, most important, he has written substantial responses to the critical
essays.
Janzen's
essay originated as a response to an earlier
version of this chapter.
I shall therefore present here only a rather expanded
version of the notes I used when I gave the talk in the Villa Serbelloni, rather than a definitive
essay.