Sentences with phrase «writes in a later book»

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 same speaker writes in a later book that divine health is our covenant right.
As Hamilton has written in his latest book, Reading Moby Dick and Other Essays (Peter Lang, 1989):
As a matter of fact, as Emmanuel Garnier, one of his former students, wrote in a later book: it just happened two or three times a century, regularly, during the last 700 hundred years!
David Suzuki writes in his latest book... that one of the easiest, yet most important, things you can do to reduce your ecological impact is to spend more time outside in natural settings.

Not exact matches

It's written by Gates» late friend, Swedish statistician and global health expert Hans Rosling, and Rosling's son and daughter - in - law, who helped finish the book after he died in 2017.
He's known for his writing on race and politics — so it makes sense that his latest project, a comic book series for Marvel called «Black Panther,» is about the first black superhero in mainstream U.S. comics.
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.
There's a small book about letters from his daughter that he had written to his daughter back in the late 20s when he was traveling in America.
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 bestsellers.
His company published the English translation of a book on the late Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping written by one of his daughters, but cancelled a contract for a critical book on China by Chris Patten, the last British governor in Hong Kong.
In his latest book, Robert Frank writes about the most unstable force in the economy — those with extreme wealtIn his latest book, Robert Frank writes about the most unstable force in the economy — those with extreme wealtin the economy — those with extreme wealth.
«If this was a straightforward guide to business success and personal growth,» Harford writes late in the book, «this would be the point at which the author would urge you to use the principles of adapting to gain wealth and success.
«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.
Ditto for the globalization of production and the other deflationary forces we've been discussing since we wrote two books on deflation in the late 1990s, Deflation: Why it's coming, whether it's good or bad, and how it will affect your investments, business and personal affairs (1998) and Deflation: How to survive and thrive in the coming wave of deflation (1999).
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.
Later, he wrote to a former student that at the Christmas celebration in the monastery, part of his book Discipleship had been read aloud.
Men wrote your bible in pieces, and later compiled it into the book we have today.
• 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.
I wrote my second book during a surprise later - in - life fourth baby pregnancy that was difficult, a traumatic birth experience, and a level of sleep deprivation that meant I probably shouldn't have been allowed to operate heavy machinery like our minivan.
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.
I haven't mentioned Meanwhile There Are Letters: The Correspondence of Eudora Welty and Ross Macdonald, edited by Welty biographer Suzanne Marrs and Macdonald biographer Tom Nolan (the most touching collection of letters I've read in years), or the latest volume in The Complete Letters of Henry James, or Catherine Lampert's superb Frank Auerbach: Speaking and Painting (which the painter Bruce Herman will be writing about for Books & Culture), or James Curtis's fascinating and beautifully produced William Cameron Menzies: The Shape of Films to Come.
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.»
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.
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 understanding.
Literate cultures rely on knowledge stored in writing and later in printed books.
When Hahn was a college student at the University of North Carolina in the mid-1980s, he met Jimmy Long, who later wrote a book about ministering to Generation X. Long predicted that Hahn would be part of a new generational ministry.
The book first appeared as a series of articles in the New Yorker and years later, writes Ben Yagoda in Slate, the fact checker reported that «he had never seen such an accurate account and that whatever the fiction veneer, In Cold Blood was a scrupulous non-fiction report.&raquin the New Yorker and years later, writes Ben Yagoda in Slate, the fact checker reported that «he had never seen such an accurate account and that whatever the fiction veneer, In Cold Blood was a scrupulous non-fiction report.&raquin Slate, the fact checker reported that «he had never seen such an accurate account and that whatever the fiction veneer, In Cold Blood was a scrupulous non-fiction report.&raquIn Cold Blood was a scrupulous non-fiction report.»
Such a view was accepted by Justin and Irenaeus in the later second century, although in the third century Dionysius, bishop of Alexandria, attempted to minimize the authority of the book by proving that since John son of Zebedee wrote the gospel ascribed to him, he can not have written the book of Revelation, since the two writings employ different ideas, styles and vocabularies.
For Buber's own discussion of the development of his dialogical thinking and the circumstances under which he wrote I and Thou [including his statement that he did not read Rosenzweig and Ebner's books till later because of a two - year period of «spiritual askesis» in which he could do no work on Hasidism nor read any philosophy], see his «Nachwort» to Martin Buber, Die Schriften über das Dialogische Prinzip [Heidelberg: Verlag» Lambert Schneider, 1954].
Murray Code has written a good introduction to Whitehead's philosophy of mathematics in his book (OO) based on Whitehead's later works.
Girard's primary example of such hypocrisy was the mythological (according to his elaboration of myth as the perpetrator's justifications for violence) notion of Mutual Assured Destruction of the Cold War arms race that was contemporary with the writing of his book in the late 1970s.
and read the book of Romans (written in the late stages of the Roman empire).
When New Testament writers refer to «the Scriptures», they always (with two exceptions, in late - written books) mean what we call the Old Testament (with or without the Apocrypha).
Richard Beck, in his book The Authenticity of Faith (which I've been reading of late), writes this about the relationship between death and fundies.
What it took for granted in the way of earlier tradition and interpretation, and what it undertook to do in the way of further interpretation, combined to make it for all later Christian doctrine and devotion one of the most important — in some respects one of the most fateful — books ever written.
P.S. I wrote an entire chapter in my latest book about the evangelical hero complex and our complicated relationship with our mutual callings and vocations and regular work, if you'd like to read more about this very thing.
And in 1937, Yves Congar, later one of the principal theologians at the Second Vatican Council (1962 — 65), wrote a groundbreaking book entitled Divided Christendom, in which he argued for the authentic gifts found in Protestantism and insisted that one could affirm the same biblical truth from different perspectives.
Even though these people will live extremely short lives, I will punish them for eternity if they don't do what I say (or really what some of them really late in the game, like a million years after they've been around, write down in a book) or in fact, even if they just don't believe in me.
Later, I found Peale had written the following in his best - selling book:
Most Bible scholars are in agreement that the other writings, or books, were written at a much later date and are not meant to be included with the original manuscripts.
@fred — the book of numbers is indeed referred as one of the books of moses, it wasn't written by him — there is actually (at least in the bible) 5 books of moses — in reality there is i think 25 books of moses — he didn't write them... oral traditions... they were write down in parts, then added together later.
Years later, provoked by various experiences to examine some cherished assumptions, I prepared a course on religion and the state and, for a book I was writing, read widely in American religious history.
For anyone who enjoys Mark Twain's writings, as I do, he wrote «Extract from Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven», which first appeared in print in Harper's Magazine in December 1907 and which was later published in book form.
She read it again in writing her latest book, «Revelations: Visions, Prophecy & Politics in the Book of Revelation.&rabook, «Revelations: Visions, Prophecy & Politics in the Book of Revelation.&raBook of Revelation.»
Reflecting on his late wife's attitude towards death in his book on finishing well, Nearing Home (Thomas Nelson) Billy Graham writes, «While we found the...
(As quoted by J.T. Barclay: City of the Great King, p. 90) Hell itself, according to the teaching of the apocalyptic writings, was a great abyss full of fire, (The Book of Enoch 18:11 - 16) in the midst of the earth, and so vividly were its tortures imagined and the satisfaction of the righteous in the contemplation of them conceived that, according to Charles» understanding of the text, a notorious element in the later Christian doctrine of hell appears in a Jewish book, probably written during Jesus» lifetBook of Enoch 18:11 - 16) in the midst of the earth, and so vividly were its tortures imagined and the satisfaction of the righteous in the contemplation of them conceived that, according to Charles» understanding of the text, a notorious element in the later Christian doctrine of hell appears in a Jewish book, probably written during Jesus» lifetbook, probably written during Jesus» lifetime:
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