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One of the best-kept secrets of the art world is that important center of postwar modernism: Taos, New Mexico.
Telling the story of Herbert J. Taylor, Paul H. Heidebrecht offers an inspiring and practical model of how God can use people in the marketplace as well as on the mission field.
What rational justification is there for conceiving of all living things as possessing inherent worth? In Respect for Nature, Paul Taylor draws on biology, moral philosophy, and environmental science to defend a biocentric environmental ethic in which all life has value. Without making claims for the moral rights of plants and animals, he offers a reasoned alternative to the prevailing anthropocentric view--that the natural environment and its wildlife are valued only as objects for human use or enjoyment. Respect for Nature provides both a full account of the biological conditions for life--human or otherwise--and a comprehensive view of the complex relationship between human beings and the whole of nature. This classic book remains a valuable resource for philosophers, biologists, and environmentalists alike--along with all those who care about the future of life on Earth. A new foreword by Dale Jamieson looks at how the original 1986 edition of Respect for Nature has shaped the study of environmental ethics, and shows why the work remains relevant to debates today.
Paul offers believers the earliest written words we have about Jesus. He ranks, after Jesus himself, as the premier interpreter of the "good news." No one explains it with more intellectual depth and earnestness than he. That is why to penetrate the Apostle's mind as he writes about Jesus's saving value is not a simple task. But Father Taylor offers here a clear and understandable commentary on his letters, which is accessible to the layman and scholar alike. The book, reflective of the latest in Pauline scholarship, is easy to read throughout and throws considerable light on what Paul has to say about Jesus, "born of a woman, born under the Law," and about the role his self-emptying (his Ke...
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List for March 7, 1844, is the list for September 10, 1842, amended in manuscript.