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Creating a Powerful Prayer Ministry in Your Church
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 47

Creating a Powerful Prayer Ministry in Your Church

"Creating a Powerful Prayer Ministry in Your Church" was written to help its readers realize the true power of prayer, and contains a step-by-step guide for helping church leaders organize and operate a successful and powerful prayer ministry.

Three Years in Mississippi
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 346

Three Years in Mississippi

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-01-04
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  • Publisher: Unknown

The first-person account of a daring, extraordinary blow against segregation

A Vindication of the Rights of Men
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 88

A Vindication of the Rights of Men

In 1790 came that "extraordinary outburst of passionate intelligence," Mary Wollstonecraft's reply to Edmund Burke's attack on the principles of the French Revolution entitled a "Vindication of the Rights of Men." In this pamphlet she held up to scorn Burke's defence of monarch and nobility, his merciless sentimentality. "It is one of the most dashing political polemics in the language," Mr. Taylor writes enthusiastically, "and has not had the attention it deserves. . . . For sheer virility and grip of her verbal instruments it is probably the finest of her works. Some of her sentences have the quality of a sword-edge, and they flash with the rapidity of a practised duellist. It was written at a white heat of indignation; yet it is altogether typical of the writer that, in the midst of the work, quite suddenly, she had one of her fits of callousness and morbid temper, and declared she would not go on. With great skill Johnson persuaded her to take it up again; and with equal suddenness her eagerness returned, and the book was finished and published before any one else could answer Burke."

Lay Bare the Heart
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 659

Lay Bare the Heart

Texas native James Farmer is one of the “Big Four” of the turbulent 1960s civil rights movement, along with Martin Luther King Jr., Roy Wilkins, and Whitney Young. Farmer might be called the forgotten man of the movement, overshadowed by Martin Luther King Jr., who was deeply influenced by Farmer’s interpretation of Gandhi’s concept of nonviolent protest. Born in Marshall, Texas, in 1920, the son of a preacher, Farmer grew up with segregated movie theaters and “White Only” drinking fountains. This background impelled him to found the Congress of Racial Equality in 1942. That same year he mobilized the first sit-in in an all-white restaurant near the University of Chicago. Under F...

Thomas Kuhn
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 500

Thomas Kuhn

This work discusses whether Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions was revolutionary. Steve Fuller argues that Kuhn held a profoundly conservative view of science and how one ought to study its history.

Facelifting without Surgery
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 66

Facelifting without Surgery

Facelifting without Surgery is written by Dr. Karin Wettig about her favourite magic recipe for longlasting beauty and a young face for women and men. Since her youth, Dr. Karin Wettig liked to experiment with healthy products for beauty, but a journey to Egypt and Israel brought her a special insight about the mud of the dead sea and its special ingredients. The recommendation she gives for face care without any make up is a combination of products everybody can find in normal shops and easy to combine with the preferred personal cream. No reason to change what you like, but to combine it with Silicea and Dead Sea Mud. Even men will feel the difference with this special face treatment that takes only 5 minutes of the daily time. Apart from some very useful treatment tips, Karin Wettig offers information and photos how to decorate a face in some minutes only and how to observe the right colours for your type as she is a living proof for what she demonstrates in her books. Enjoy!

A Vindication of Political Virtue
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 394

A Vindication of Political Virtue

Nearly two hundred years ago, Mary Wollstonecraft wrote what is considered to be the first major work of feminist political theory: A Vindication of the Rights of Women. Much has been written about this work, and about Wollstonecraft as the intellectual pioneer of feminism, but the actual substance and coherence of her political thought have been virtually ignored. Virginia Sapiro here provides the first full-length treatment of Wollstonecraft's political theory. Drawing on all of Wollstonecraft's works and treating them thematically rather than sequentially, Sapiro shows that Wollstonecraft's ideas about women's rights, feminism, and gender are elements of a broad and fully developed philos...

Virulent Zones
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 178

Virulent Zones

Scientists have identified southern China as a likely epicenter for viral pandemics, a place where new viruses emerge out of intensively farmed landscapes and human--animal interactions. In Virulent Zones, Lyle Fearnley documents the global plans to stop the next influenza pandemic at its source, accompanying virologists and veterinarians as they track lethal viruses to China's largest freshwater lake, Poyang Lake. Revealing how scientific research and expert agency operate outside the laboratory, he shows that the search for origins is less a linear process of discovery than a constant displacement toward new questions about cause and context. As scientists strive to understand the environm...

The Burke-Wollstonecraft Debate
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 306

The Burke-Wollstonecraft Debate

Many modern conservatives and feminists trace the roots of their ideologies, respectively, to Edmund Burke (1729-1797) and Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797). Here, according to the author Burke is misconstrued if viewed as mainly providing a warning about the dangers of attempting to turn utopian visions into political reality.

Family Feuds
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 268

Family Feuds

Family Feuds is the first sustained comparative study of the place of the family in the political thought of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Edmund Burke, and Mary Wollstonecraft. Eileen Hunt Botting argues that Wollstonecraft recognized both Rousseau's and Burke's influential stature in late eighteenth-century debates about the family. Wollstonecraft critically identified them as philosophical and political partners in the defense of the patriarchal structure of the family, yet she used Rousseau's conceptions of childhood education and maternal empowerment and Burke's understanding of the family as the affective basis for political socialization as a theoretical foundation for her own egalitarian vision of the family. It is this ideal of the egalitarian family, Botting contends, that is one of the most important yet least appreciated legacies of Enlightenment political thought.