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PREFACE The book is about the different views and perspectives of mine in various sceneries and incidents. This book is divided into three sections as Poetries, Short stories and Quotes of me. I confess that the names and the characters mentioned in this book are purely imaginary. In the Poetry section, I have expressed my thoughts and ideas in the way of poems. Most of my poems are based on the poetic expression of my thoughts. In the Short story section, I have written two short stories. Actually, I have used my future goals in the story “The Surreal of Nahkkurahsk”. It is also an imaginary story. Both the stories will express my views on my ambitions in future but in real, they are imaginary. In the Quotes section, I have expressed my views on my experiences and ideas which are slightly related to philosophies in this book. My quotes will be useful to everyone in our society and so I named this part of the book as “My Quotes to Our Society” This book is all about my views on all the things so that I titled this book as “The Views of an Ordinary Man” After reading this book, you will surely feel the good vibes in your heart and my quotes will help you to lead the great successful life. K. Sharukkhan
‘The Faith of an Ordinary Man’ is a book first and foremost about an ‘ordinary man’s’ experience of God. The subtitle ‘Putting God before Religion’ was specifically chosen to depict the intent of the book: finding and learning about and forming a relationship with God first – the first priority – the reason for all the rest. Our chosen church and life then serve this relationship. Topics include: ‘The Main Event’; Some false teachings; What God DID promise; Getting to know God; Loving me / Loving Others; Prayer – our conversations with God; It’s a Spiritual War; Church.
The author analyzes belief in the Christian God and demonstrates how its defenses crumble with careful analysis. He points out that historically thousands of beliefs in deities have appeared, flourished, and faded away. Christianity, he claims, will be no exception. Fundamentalism is flourishing in the U.S., but history reveals that over time, man's intellect wins. Cases in point. Socrates had to drink poison because he would not recognize the Gods of the day. Galileo's victory over the Catholic Church. The demise of the Spanish Inquisition.
Get the Summary of Paul Newman's The Extraordinary Life of an Ordinary Man in 20 minutes. Please note: This is a summary & not the original book. Paul Newman's memoir, "The Extraordinary Life of an Ordinary Man," delves into his affluent yet complex upbringing in Shaker Heights, Ohio, marked by familial tensions and his parents' troubled souls. His father's secret alcoholism and his mother's controlling nature left a lasting impact on Paul, influencing his views on success and identity. Paul's early life was characterized by affluence, sibling rivalry, and a sense of alienation during adolescence...
The essays in this book explore a wide range of themes of current interest and controversy, with a particular focus on lesbian and gay issues, nationality postcoloniality, sexuality and criminality, and the politics of rights struggles.>
The analyses in this book focus on the participation of the people within New Zealand’s system of government. The chapters provide a thorough examination of the government’s size, accessibility, structure, electoral system, and active committees in order to explain trends in the participation of sub-state actors, such as indigenous peoples and other minority groups.
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What the presence of law tells us about our beliefs, our language, and the world around us In a strikingly original work intended not only for practicing lawyers but for anyone interested in the modern dilemma of the loss of meaning, Joseph Vining invites us to reconsider law as a unique form of thought, inseparably connected to everything in the world that makes up human identity. Oliver Wendell Holmes asserted at the end of the nineteenth century that human law is ultimately a phenomenon in quantitative relations to its causes and effects, and many have been left with an impression of law as a set of processes and rules. Vining takes issue with this and with various reductionist attempts in scientific thought today to express the universe in a single mathematical description of forces, as well as with post-structuralist speculation that there are no valid truth claims, and that human inter-action can be reduced to analysis of power relationships. Law, he argues, is an independent discourse, not reducible to any other, that exists only in human interaction and reflects continuing human worth. Vining's search to reinstate the spiritual dimension in public discourse brings him head-on with a wide array of powerful academic forces: linguistics theory, political science, the new historicism, and the traditional teaching of law. This book consists of a collection of what Vining calls "amplifications" of the implied text of the law—impressions, commentaries, vignettes, poems, and dialogues—which illustrate aspects of conventional legal language and logic, and the subjects legal practice regularly deals with, such as promises, death, and crime. Throughout we see that law reaches deeply into the way we know ourselves and other persons, all of whom speak through law as law connects language to person and person to action. The texts generated by legal method constitute the living record of social acquaintance and contest, speaking across cultures and across centuries. It is the close reading of legal texts and contexts, Vining argues, that provides the present source of the transcendental in modern secular life. But unlike the other academic arts of interpretation, law alone is directly connected with the most real, the most particular and, at the same time, the most universal facts of social life. From Newton's Sleep casts doubt on the certainties past and present and creates new grounds for skepticism and conviction. The fragmentary form of the book mirrors its subject. It is intended to be picked up and read as occasion allows by lawyers and anyone interested in law.
First Published in 1977. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.