709 research outputs found
Homecoming Man (Book Review)
Reviewed Title: The Homecoming Man. Hugh Cook. Oakville, Ontario: Mosaic Press. 324 pp
Spiritual Nature of Man (Book Review)
Reviewed Title: The Spiritual Nature of Man, by Alister Hardy. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1979. 162 pp
Genesis and Early Man (Book Review)
Reviewed Title: Genesis and Early Man, by Arthur Custance. Zondervan Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1975. Vol. II of The Doorway Papers
Legacy of a one-man book maker
Journal ArticleLate in 1983, Dr. Gregory Thompson, newly appointed head of Special Collections at the University of Utah's Marriott Library received a call from a local gentleman interested in selling off some books. In what would become a commonplace occurrence for Thompson over the next 27 years, he and Margaret Landesman (head of Collection Development) made the short trek off campus to the owner's home to appraise the collection's significance for the library
Clarke\u27s Church, Community and State in Relation to Education: Towards a Theory of School Organization; Hilliard, Lee, Rupp, and Niblett\u27s Christianity in Education: The Hibbert Lectures; Pollard\u27s Education and the Spirit of Man - Book Review
No Free Man: Canada, the Great War, and the Enemy Alien Experience (Book Review) by Bohdan S. Kordan
Review of No Free Man: Canada, the Great War, and the Enemy Alien Experience by Bohdan S. Kordan
Teilhard de Chardin on Insects in "The Phenomenon of Man"
The year 2009 saw the publication of a curious work bearing the title The Secret Life of Insects: An Entomological Alphabet (New Brunswick and London: Transaction Publishers). The author, Peter Milward (b. 1925), excels in having combined together humour and profundity. The title is indeed curious and attention-catching, although it can also be misleading, for in fact the book contains a wide series of philosophical and theological reflections. Milward himself confesses in the book’s prologue: “I make no claim to entomological expertise. That is to say, I confess my ignorance of insects … I know nothing about insects, except what everybody knows.”As Milward proceeds to explain, his original and insightful reflections about insects “go on to discourse about the philosophy and the theology of the universe, ending (of course) with God”.peer-reviewe
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