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Throughout history, war seems to have had an iron grip on humanity. In this short book, internationally renowned philosopher of war, Christopher Coker, challenges the view that war is an idea that we can cash in for an even better one - peace. War, he argues, is central to the human condition; it is part of the evolutionary inheritance which has allowed us to survive and thrive. New technologies and new geopolitical battles may transform the face and purpose of war in the 21st century, but our capacity for war remains undiminished. The inconvenient truth is that we will not see the end of war until it exhausts its own evolutionary possibilities.
This wide ranging and challenging book explores the relationship between subjectivity and mortality as it is understood by a number of twentieth-century French philosophers including Sartre, Lacan, Levinas and Derrida. Making intricate and sometimes unexpected connections, Christina Howells draws together the work of prominent thinkers from the fields of phenomenology and existentialism, religious thought, psychoanalysis, and deconstruction, focussing in particular on the relations between body and soul, love and death, desire and passion. From Aristotle through to contemporary analytic philosophy and neuroscience the relationship between mind and body (psyche and soma, consciousness and bra...
Dean Nygard is that blond, athletic California teenager that seems to have everything going on in life. Everything, that is, until at age 15 he watches his mother die of breast cancer. Three years later when it seems life is back on track, a second tragedy, this one of his own doing, devastates his life again. Follow along as Dean's life goes wildly off the rails and we are left to wonder how we would ever survive what Dean is facing . . .
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Sir Matthew Nathan's account of the history of West Coker was originally published in 1957.
Harmon R. Gardner (ca.1807-1875), possibly the son of John Gardner and Lettice (Letty) Wood, married Caroline Kendrick in 1838 in Henry County, Tennessee, and moved to Polk County, Missouri about 1843, and in 1866 to Marion County, Arkansas. Descendants lived in Tennessee, Missouri, Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Texas, California and related families.