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THE SECRET AVENGERS AND YOUNG ALLIES CO-STAR IN THIS SENSES-SHATTERING SAGA! Deep in the heart of Colombia, an immense and unmarked engine hums at a steady, ominous pace. Its purpose: to exploit a tear in the barrier between this world and another; to harvest and refine an exotic energy source for Roxxon Energy Corp. But just on the other side of that tear, inside the Negative Zone, a dark entity of vast power has been waiting for what has seemed like centuries preparing for the moment when he can finally reach through and again cast his judgment on humans and mutants alike. For the psychomagnetic abomination called Onslaught, that moment is about to arrive, and he'll have the Girl Without a World, Nomad, to thank for it! Eisner Award-winning writer Sean McKeever (YOUNG ALLIES) and artist Filipe Andrade (X-23) team up to bring you to the heart of terror and the edge of sanity in this hotly anticipated epic! Collecting ONSLAUGHT UNLEASHED #1-4.
Welcome back to the smallest town in the universe! A devastating storm has trapped the Outpost under ice, threatening to crush them all. As Planning Team ventures out into the Frost to save them, teenagers Alea, Sam, and Lyss find an unexpected opportunity to prove their worthÉ and uncover greater mysteries buried beneath the surface. Collects OUTPOST ZERO #5-9
With their team in disarray, the remaining Titans set out to find some new recruits, but back at Titan Tower, the 'wonder dog' is about to turn nasty Can the spirit-summoning Kid Eternity, the fractious and super-strong Bombshell, and super-charged Static help their new friends to face the threat of Ares, the God of War?
Moral philosophy has long been dominated by the aim of understanding morality and the virtues in terms of principles. However, the underlying assumption that this is the best approach has received almost no defence, and has been attacked by particularists, who argue that the traditional link between morality and principles is little more than an unwarranted prejudice. In Principled Ethics, Michael Ridge and Sean McKeever meet the particularist challenge head on, and defend a distinctive view they call 'generalism as a regulative ideal'. After cataloguing the wide array of views that have gone under the heading 'particularism' they explain why the main particularist arguments fail to establis...
When everyone's favorite shape-shifting secret agent is sent to Europe to investigate a biotech company rumored to be using mutants as guinea pigs, she discovers a mystery far greater than anything she'd imagined! As Mystique and Shortpack get closer to their objective, they must confront a new revelation: that someone is selling transient mutants as guinea pigs, slaves and worse!
All-ages fun featuring the wild and crazy kid counterparts to Marvel's greatest heroes! Spidey gets the paperboy blues, Wolverine goes on a cereal quest, Hulk goes on a date and the Fantastic Four are impersonated by alien Skrulls. Iceman and Firestar help Spidey deliver his newspapers while he babysits Power Pack. Thor returns, Iron Man builds armour for the Avengers, and Hawkeye squares off against Galactus. And where did Red Hulk and Blue Hulk come from anyway? Plus: a complete run of Mini Marvels classic comic strips.
Revision of the Nov. 2004 issue of Mary Jane.
Containing eleven essays covering a broad range of topics, this book addresses developments in particularist moral theory.
Few philosophers attempt to establish that there is an evaluative and moral realm. They make these major assumptions without argument. This plays into the hands of moral nihilists and certain other moral skeptics. A major obstacle that prevents philosophers from developing such arguments is the long-standing view that one cannot derive an “ought” from an “is,” that is, one cannot begin with purely descriptive non-evaluative propositions and deduce an evaluative or moral proposition. In this book, Edmund Wall develops arguments for evaluative and moral principles. His deductive reasoning begins with certain purely descriptive and non-evaluative propositions concerning human nature, establishing a basic moral principle of human life and a basic moral principle of knowledge. By providing such deductive arguments for basic moral principles, Wall makes considerable progress in establishing a sure foundation for morality. He further develops his case by responding to a plethora of anticipated objections against his two arguments, and by delineating the advantages of his own moral approach over a number of influential moral theories and competing accounts of moral reasoning.