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Asqueado de su indolente existencia, Esa?Mipatio, un madrileño de veinticinco años, hijo de un empresario millonario y granuja y de una cirujana algo desquiciada, decide romper con el pasado. Atrás quedan los grotescos y desmedidos episodios de una vida marcada por el desencanto, el absurdo existencial y los desmanes más desmesurados. Con tintes bíblico-alegóricos, antisociales y amorales, en línea con El Diario de un hombre humillado, de Félix de Azúa.
La toma de Toledo significaría un antes y un después en la vida del infanzón Enrique Sánchez y su hermano Bernardo. Con el objetivo de investigar sobre la vida del musulmán, llegarán a conocer los entresijos que controlan el mundo que los rodea. En su intento por cambiar la vida que llevan y haciendo los más inverosímiles amigos, vivirán aventuras que acarrearán enormes peligros. Comprenderán el mundo musulmán y verán de primera mano la violencia de los francos y la ortodoxia de los almorávides en el reinado de Alfonso VI el Bravo. Una historia donde sus personajes buscarán la paz en la península Ibérica y la amistad entre dos religiones que no encuentran motivos para no odiarse.
Los autores enfocan sus reflexiones hacia tres puntos de vista distintos pero no excluyentes: el lenguaje, el pensamiento y los valores. Su objetivo es desarrollar en los niños estos tres aspectos a partir de una intervención educativa que aproveche sus posibilidades en el contexto del aula.
Aproximación sistemática y actualizada a los problemas filosóficos que plantea el conocimiento humano, dividida en cinco grandes apartados: método, definición y posibilidades de conocimiento, justificación, base empírica del conocimiento y relación entre semántica y epistemología. El libro de J. L. Blasco y T. Grimaltos aporta una exposición clara y rigurosa de la epistemología contemporánea.
50 poemas que forman parte del lado más desconocido de Carlos Capella
This is a bilingual edition of the selected peer-reviewed papers that were submitted for the International Symposium on Jesuit Studies on the thought of the Jesuit Francisco Suárez (1548–1617). The symposium was co-organized in Seville in 2018 by the Departamento de Humanidades y Filosofía at Universidad Loyola Andalucía and the Institute for Advanced Jesuit Studies at Boston College. Suárez was a theologian, philosopher and jurist who had a significant cultural impact on the development of modernity. Commemorating the four-hundredth anniversary of his death, the symposium studied the work of Suárez and other Jesuits of his time in the context of diverse traditions that came together in Europe between the late Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and early modernity.
Studies the complex constraints and trade-offs the second administration of Colombian President Uribe (2006–2010) encountered as it attempted to resolve that nation’s violent Marxist insurrection and to have a more efficient judicial system Fighting Monsters in the Abyss offers a deeply insightful analysis of the efforts by the second administration of Colombian President Álvaro Uribe Vélez (2006–2010) to resolve a decades-long Marxist insurgency in one of Latin America’s most important nations. Continuing work from his prior books about earlier Colombian presidents and yet written as a stand-alone study, Colombia expert Harvey F. Kline illuminates the surprising successes and setbacks in Uribe’s response to this existential threat. In State Building and Conflict Resolution in Colombia, 1986–1994, Kline documented and explained the limited successes of Presidents Virgilio Barco and César Gaviria in putting down the revolutionaries while also confronting challenges from drug dealers and paramilitary groups. The following president Andrés Pastrana then boldly changed course and attempted resolution through negotiations, an effort whose failure Kline examines in Chronicle of a Failure Foretold. In his third book, Showing Teeth to the Dragons, Kline shows how in his first term President Álvaro Uribe Vélez more successfully quelled the insurrection through a combination of negotiated demobilization of paramilitary groups and using US backing to mount more effective military campaigns. Kline opens Fighting Monsters in the Abyss with a recap of Colombia’s complex political history, the development of Marxist rebels and paramilitary groups and their respective relationships to the narcotics trade, and the attempts of successive Colombian presidents to resolve the crisis. Kline next examines the ability of the Colombian government to reimpose rule in rebel-controlled territories as well as the challenges of administering justice. He recounts the difficulties in the enforcement of the landmark Law of Justice and Peace as well as two significant government scandals, that of the “false positives” (“falsos positivos”) in which innocent civilians were killed by the military to inflate the body counts of dead insurgents and a second scandal related to illegal wiretapping. In tracing Uribe’s choices, strategies, successes, and failures, Kline also uses the example of Colombia to explore a dimension quite unique in the literature about state building: what happens when some members of a government resort to breaking rules or betraying their societies’ values in well-intentioned efforts to build a stronger state?