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Displaying records 151 through 160 of 4000 |
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Price: $24.95
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Sale: $9.99
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Manufacturer: Aldus Books Inc
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Hardcover
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Author: R. D. Gold
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Publisher: Aldus Books Inc
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Dewey Decimal Number: 210
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Publication Date: 2008-03-07
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Reading Level: 268
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Description: There is a great debate unfolding across the country pitting reason and science against revelation and faith. Bondage of the Mind talks to that vast audience of modern readers who are trying to figure out where they stand on the spectrum of religious belief. Recognizing that even the most skeptical among us are uncomfortable with the atheist label, Bondage of the Mind develops a powerful argument that our choice is not limited to fundamentalism (I believe all of it) or atheism (I believe none of it). Bondage of the Mind relentlessly dismantles the doctrines of religious fundamentalism - focusing on Orthodox Judaism (Jewish fundamentalism) -- but its core message is not that religion should be abandoned. Rather, the core message is that religious fundamentalism is an insidious force that must be combated if our hearts and minds are to remain free. Bondage of the Mind announces itself as a book about truth, but it is also a book about freedom.
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Price: $19.99
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Sale: $9.50
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Manufacturer: Oxford University Press, USA
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Ursula Goodenough
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Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
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Edition: 1
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Dewey Decimal Number: 508
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Publication Date: 2000-06-15
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Reading Level: 224
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Description: Ursula Goodenough is an internationally recognized cell biologist; she is also an accomplished amateur theologian--an unusual combination of interests in a time when science and religion are widely divided. In The Sacred Depths of Nature, she proposes what she calls a "planetary ethic" drawing on the lessons of both science and metaphysics, celebrating some of the mysteries that are central to both: "the mystery of why there is anything at all, rather than nothing," for one, and "the mystery of why the universe seems so strange," for another. Exploring scientifically based narratives about the creation of the universe and the origins of life, Goodenough forges a kind of religious naturalism that will not be unfamiliar to readers of New Age literature--save that her naturalism has the hard-nosed rigor of a laboratory-trained scholar behind it. Goodenough offers a crash course in the life sciences for her readers, encompassing the basics, for instance, of biochemistry in just a few paragraphs (and getting it right in the bargain), touching on Darwinian biology and population dynamics and even chaos theory to make "an epic of evolution" that has all the hallmarks of an origin myth. Faith and reason, in her view, are not mutually exclusive, and her well-written treatise makes a good argument for bridging the gap between the two. --Gregory McNamee
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Price: $23.99
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Sale: $16.31
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Manufacturer: Crossway Books
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Hardcover
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Author: Christopher W. Morgan::Robert A. Peterson
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Publisher: Crossway Books
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Dewey Decimal Number: 231.8
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Publication Date: 2008-10-31
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Reading Level: 256
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Description: Suffering and the Goodness of God presents biblical truths concerning suffering and challenges believers to promote justice and to emulate God’s grace as they minister to others. Famine. Sickness. Terrorist Attacks. Natural disasters. Each day horrific scenes of suffering are streamed before us through television, the Internet, and newspapers. Believers are taught that God is good, and they believe this truth. Yet when they are faced with suffering and hardships, the one question believers most often asked is, Why? Suffering and the Goodness of God brings insight to many contemporary concerns of suffering by outlining Old and New Testament truths and tackling difficult questions concerning God’s sovereignty, human freedom, and the nature of evil. Suffering and the Goodness of God offers believers biblical truths concerning suffering and then challenges them to promote justice in the harsh, unsure world around them and to emulate God’s grace as they minister to those who are suffering.
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Price: $6.95
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Sale: $2.94
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Manufacturer: Ignatius Press
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Josef Pieper
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Publisher: Ignatius Press
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Dewey Decimal Number: 401
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Publication Date: 1992-04
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Reading Level: 54
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Description: One of the great Catholic philosophers of our day reflects on the way language has been abused so that, instead of being a means of communicating the truth and entering more deeply into it, and of the acquisition of wisdom, it is being used to control people and manipulate them to achieve practical ends. Reality becomes intelligible through words. Man speaks so that through naming things, what is real may become intelligible. This mediating character of language, however, is being increasingly corrupted. Tyranny, propaganda, mass-media destroy and distort words. They offer us apparent realities whose fictive character threatens to become opaque. Josef Pieper shows with energetic zeal, but also with ascetical restraint, the path out of this dangerous situation. We are constrained to see things again as they are and from the truth thus grasped, to live and to work.
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Price: $29.95
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Sale: $18.66
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Manufacturer: Crossroad Herder
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Rene Girard
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Publisher: Crossroad Herder
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Dewey Decimal Number: 291.34
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Publication Date: 1996-11-01
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Reading Level: 310
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Description: In one volume, an anthology of seminal work of one of the twentieth century's most original thinkers.
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Price: $39.95
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Sale: $20.99
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Manufacturer: Doubleday
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Hardcover
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Author: Alan F. Segal
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Publisher: Doubleday
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Dewey Decimal Number: 202.3
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Publication Date: 2004-07-13
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Reading Level: 880
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Description: A magisterial work of social history, Life After Death illuminates the many different ways ancient civilizations grappled with the question of what exactly happens to us after we die.
In a masterful exploration of how Western civilizations have defined the afterlife, Alan F. Segal weaves together biblical and literary scholarship, sociology, history, and philosophy. A renowned scholar, Segal examines the maps of the afterlife found in Western religious texts and reveals not only what various cultures believed but how their notions reflected their societies’ realities and ideals, and why those beliefs changed over time. He maintains that the afterlife is the mirror in which a society arranges its concept of the self. The composition process for Judaism, Christianity, and Islam begins in grief and ends in the victory of the self over death.
Arguing that in every religious tradition the afterlife represents the ultimate reward for the good, Segal combines historical and anthropological data with insights gleaned from religious and philosophical writings to explain the following mysteries: why the Egyptians insisted on an afterlife in heaven, while the body was embalmed in a tomb on earth; why the Babylonians viewed the dead as living in underground prisons; why the Hebrews remained silent about life after death during the period of the First Temple, yet embraced it in the Second Temple period (534 B.C.E. –70 C.E.); and why Christianity placed the afterlife in the center of its belief system. He discusses the inner dialogues and arguments within Judaism and Christianity, showing the underlying dynamic behind them, as well as the ideas that mark the differences between the two religions. In a thoughtful examination of the influence of biblical views of heaven and martyrdom on Islamic beliefs, he offers a fascinating perspective on the current troubling rise of Islamic fundamentalism.
In tracing the organic, historical relationships between sacred texts and communities of belief and comparing the visions of life after death that have emerged throughout history, Segal sheds a bright, revealing light on the intimate connections between notions of the afterlife, the societies that produced them, and the individual’s search for the ultimate meaning of life on earth.
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Price: $14.00
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Sale: $5.75
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Manufacturer: Hampton Roads Publishing
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Jim Marion
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Publisher: Hampton Roads Publishing
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Dewey Decimal Number: 204
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Publication Date: 2004-07-19
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Reading Level: 216
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Description: Is God dead? Jim Marion says that what has really died is our myth of God, our worn-out notion of the deity in the sky, separate from us, who intervenes in our lives only when petitioned strenuously. God still exists, but we need to update our interpretation of God’s nature. The mythic sky God was never real, says Marion. It was only a concept of God, now outdated. The real God is in the human heart, within the world, operating as the engine of evolution. God grows us from within into ever higher levels of awareness. In a bold revisioning of contemporary spirituality, Marion, author of the acclaimed Putting on the Mind of Christ, shows us how to expand consciousness and follow the genuine path of Jesus and the world’s mystics into greater inner development.
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Price: $13.99
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Sale: $7.58
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Manufacturer: Master Books
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Jack Cuozzo
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Publisher: Master Books
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Dewey Decimal Number: 301
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Publication Date: 1998-11
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Reading Level: 349
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Description: In "Buried Alive", the author, a New Jersey orthodontist, concludes that the Neanderthals were in reality humans from the time of the biblical patriarchs.
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Price: $14.95
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Sale: $7.99
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Manufacturer: Paulist Press
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: John F. Haught
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Publisher: Paulist Press
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Dewey Decimal Number: 231
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Publication Date: 1986-02
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Reading Level: 158
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Description: Suggests five ways of thinking realistically about God by reflecting on profound human experience of depth, future, freedom, beauty and truth.
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Price: $20.95
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Sale: $16.91
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Manufacturer: Stanford University Press
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Number of Items: 1
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Binding: Paperback
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Author: Giorgio Agamben
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Publisher: Stanford University Press
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Edition: 1
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Dewey Decimal Number: 227.107
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Publication Date: 2005-11-07
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Reading Level: 216
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Description: In The Time That Remains, Agamben seeks to separate the Pauline texts from the history of the Church that canonized them, thus revealing them to be “the fundamental messianic texts of the West.” He argues that Paul’s letters are concerned not with the foundation of a new religion but rather with the “messianic” abolition of Jewish law. Situating Paul’s texts in the context of early Jewish messianism, this book is part of a growing set of recent critiques devoted to the period when Judaism and Christianity were not yet fully distinct, placing Paul in the context of what has been called “Judaeo-Christianity.”
Agamben’s philosophical exploration of the problem of messianism leads to the other major figure discussed in this book, Walter Benjamin. Advancing a claim without precedent in the vast literature on Benjamin, Agamben argues that Benjamin’s philosophy of history constitutes a repetition and appropriation of Paul’s concept of “remaining time.” Through a close reading and comparison of Benjamin’s “Theses on the Philosophy of History” and the Pauline Epistles, Agamben discerns a number of striking and unrecognized parallels between the two works.
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Displaying records 151 through 160 of 4000
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