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A journey of self-discovery for passion and purpose, an exploration of humanity's favorite flaws and how to overcome them and then looking forward to love, diversity and inclusion and resilience skills.
A character flaw is the imperfection of an individual. It is a blemish of the face, body or mind which often causes that individual shame. A character flaw of humanity is the imperfection of society. It is a blemish in the form of thoughts, actions and behaviors, which often causes an extreme amount of detriment to the world. Character Flaws Of Humanity examines some of the major flaws slowing and destroying the positive progression of today's world.
Six basic world problems, with many ramifications, continue to present humanity with opportunity for progress. A perspective on these problems is shown in this book. The spiritual factors and subjective causes are related to outer appearances and effects on the world scene.
How did a thirteen-year-old kid manage to retain a Yale University professor's request to work on the design of a secret invention at a private research facility? ...on his own without anyone helping him? "It was because at age 12, I applied a simple principle," says William Eastwood. What William Eastwood discovered in the 1970's in his youth, YEARS BEFORE Einstein's friend, David Bohm published "Wholeness and the Implicate Order" in the 1980s, was a secret about the universe. "When the science came out," Eastwood adds, "I had already been testing it for over five years. By the time I was 22, I owned three large historic homes on the coast of Maine. And I credit the worldview given in this book for all of those achievements." David Bohm is the physicist who Albert Einstein called "a kindred spirit," and who's Ph.D. thesis - being top secret and classified - was awarded at the University of California at Berkeley by no other than Robert Oppenheimer himself. Bohm tells us that the environment around each of us IS A PROJECTION OF OUR MIND, BRAIN AND FIVE SENSES. "Early scientist missed this," says Eastwood, "and as a result settled on a picture of reality that was missing facts, VERY IMPORTANT FACTS that Bohm discovered. If we apply the science and change our core beliefs in a specific way, we can solve the world's problems and achieve any goal. That's why I had to write 'The Solution...' "Putin's terror war against Ukraine, the attack on democracy, crime, social and personal problems alike, all have a simple solution, and I know what it is." So powerful is Eastwood's philosophy that the government prevented the publication of this book for over twenty years. It has only recently been made available to the public, and only because Eastwood used the philosophy to overcome the government's attempts to stop him. Will you give William Eastwood the chance he deserves? In "The Solution..." Eastwood explains exactly what is causing the problems in our world today. He gives you the solution to all of humanity's problems and then explains exactly how you can create what you want in life. He does so in simple and easy to understand words that anyone can understand. Others have agreed: "We can literally change the course of civilization by lifting the race to a higher path through implementing 'The Solution...'" says Mario Fusco, TH.D., RS.D, B.S.C.... There is nothing else like this book in the world today.
Humanity's flaws is an anthology full of different pieces of writing that all lead into the same story; the story of us, the people. This anthology points out our flaws in a way we aren't used to seeing but in a way in which helps us grasp them. This is the story of a human in all of its forms, this is the story of us.
The Devil made me do it is a bullshit statement! Come on this journey with me and I promise it will be a rollercoaster of emotions but worth the ride as we discuss the good and the bad humanity has to offer. But here is the crazy thing, good and bad are not always easily distinguishable from one another and evil, true evil, dirties the window we try and view each of our worlds through. How do I know? Inside this book is a controversial conversation that will challenge you, anger you, enlighten you and maybe even change you. It will challenge your egregores; that group think you didn’t even know you belong to and the sources of information you rely on. The path to being a better person, to yourself and others, is easy to see, but not always easy to walk. Come join me on this journey of self-evaluation and discovery. You won’t forget it!
The doctrine of the Incarnation lies at the heart of Christianity. But the idea that 'God was in Christ' has become a much-debated topic in modern theology. Oliver Crisp addresses six key issues in the Incarnation defending a robust version of the doctrine, in keeping with classical Christology. He explores perichoresis, or interpenetration, with reference to both the Incarnation and Trinity. Over two chapters Crisp deals with the human nature of Christ and then provides an argument against the view, common amongst some contemporary theologians, that Christ had a fallen human nature. He considers the notion of divine kenosis or self-emptying, and discusses non-Incarnational Christology, focusing on the work of John Hick. This view denies Christ is God Incarnate, regarding him as primarily a moral exemplar to be imitated. Crisp rejects this alternative account of the nature of Christology.
Mankind is on a crash course with destiny and doesn’t seem to have a clue! We are witnessing rapidly accelerating global warming of our own making that could potentially result in species extinctions, including our own. Witness widespread signs of the impending disaster including super storms, record drought, floods, forest fires and climate refugees. Dangerous nuclear saber rattling by Russia and North Korea is on the upswing and the Russian invasion of Ukraine threatens to expand to Western Europe. The increasing number of fascist, autocratic, dictator-run states such as China, North Korea, Turkey, and Brazil are snuffing individual freedoms, denying social justice and fanning the flames of global conflict. The world’s population is rapidly approaching eight billion and is well past the point of Earth’s ability to sustain us. Crushing poverty, starvation, and dozens of militarized religious and ethnic conflicts. We have polluted our planet with toxic chemicals, oil spills, reckless dumping of trash on land and sea, contaminating the oceans with fish and fowl killing plastic waste. This book is the result of overwhelming outrage and disappointment with our species, our failure to adequately address worldwide problems that threaten our very existence. We (if there is a ‘we’) should be embarrassed and ashamed. Nature has endowed us with near perfect bodies and amazing brains and for the most part we squander our evolutionary inheritance. And the greatest gift of all, consciousness, is under-developed in most of us. In this collection of essays, the author offers insights into the human condition, the reasons we have run afoul of the natural order, along solutions to alleviate human suffering on an individual and global scale plus some playful jabs at our human folly.
Colin Gunton is regarded by many as one of the most important English theologians of the twentieth century. A prolific writer and creative thinker, Gunton taught at King’s College, London, for over thirty years, until his untimely death in 2003. In this first single-authored introduction to Gunton’s theology, Uche Anizor traces the key theological themes, major contributors, and criticisms of his work. Each chapter provides a synthesis and overview of Gunton’s thought on a particular doctrine or set of doctrines, calling attention to the Trinitarian shape of his theology. In Trinity and Humanity, Anizor provides a handy entrée into the corpus of this major thinker.
In Instigation to Crimes Against Humanity – The Flawed Jurisprudence of the Trial and Appeal Chambers of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), Avitus A. Agbor critiques the jurisprudence of the ICTR on instigation to crimes against humanity under Article 6(1).