LAPHAM, F.:Peter: The Myth, the Man and the Writings. A Study of Early Petrine Text and Tradition
- Taschenbuch 2017, ISBN: 9780826462145
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Pluto Press. Used - Good. Item in good condition and has highlighting/writing on text. Used texts may not contain supplemental items such as CDs, info-trac etc..., Pluto Press, 2.5, Plu… Mehr…
Pluto Press. Used - Good. Item in good condition and has highlighting/writing on text. Used texts may not contain supplemental items such as CDs, info-trac etc..., Pluto Press, 2.5, Pluto Press, 2017-10-15. Paperback. Very Good. No guarantee that access code has not been previously used or that CD is included. Light dirt, wear, fading or curling of cover or spine, good binding, minimal- if any highlighting or writing. Used book stickers or residue may be on cover., Pluto Press, 2017-10-15, 3, Pluto Press, 2017-10-15. Paperback. Acceptable. No apparent missing pages. Light wrinkling from liquid damage. Moderate wear, wrinkling, Curling or creasing on cover and spine. May have used stickers or residue. Dust cover may be missing. Good binding with NO apparent loose or torn pages. No apparent writing or highlighting. Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with used books., Pluto Press, 2017-10-15, 2.5, GREYWOOD PUB., 1973. Mass Market Paperback. Very Good. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., GREYWOOD PUB., 1973, 3, New York: Society for the Study of Myth and Tradition, 2006. Paperback in very good condition.. Includes a brief excerpt from a talk by Lord John Pentland titled The Thinking of a Man of Vision: Four Virtues of a Real Thinker, also, a review of Frank Sinclair's Without Benefit of Clergy reviewed by David Appelbaum along with a brief interview with Mr. Sinclair; Other articles include Thinking as Prayer by Christopher Bramford, an interview with religious historian Karen Armstrong, Conflict Resolution in Rural Tibet by James Opie, Plato's Cosmic Container by Bethe Hagens, Kabbalistic Lessons on Thinking by Marc Gafni, an interview with John Daido Loori Roshi, The Logic of the Absolute on the metaphysical writing of Rene Guenon by Peter Samsel, We Live in a Boundless World of Thought by Swami Sivananda, and many others on Thinking; 127 pages., Society for the Study of Myth and Tradition, 2006, 3, Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd, 2003. Hardcover. New. Malcolm Bradbury on William Golding Golding addressed fundamental questions of good and evil, being, wholeness and creative aspiration in a godless age. His stories were, he once said, not fables but mythsâfable being âan invented thing out on the surface whereas myth in something that comes out of the roots of things in the ancient sense of being a key to existence...and experience as a whole. Goldingâs work challenges many of the liberal and humanistic conventions of much British fiction, and there is a certain timelessness about the proseâthough not the techniqueâwhich makes it stand monumentally apart from much contemporary writing. But it is and will surely remain a central contribution to the modern British novel. The 1983 Nobel Prize winner author, Golding had the unique distinction of being both a fabulist and a realist. Goldingâs works will remain of significant relevance as long as man continues to careen madly on the razorâs edge of so-called civilisation while his ugly true self-barbaric and greedy claims his soul in Mephistophilean triumph. At times Goldingâs eschatological views are sombre, but he weaves a torturous path through the paradoxes of good and evil in his novels; Pincher Martin, Darkness Visible and The Spire (to name only a few). He tried to achieve a synthesis of flesh and spirit through an illuminating reconciliation. Golding wished to salvage the soul of man from the wreckage of 20th century godlessness, entropy and the malaise of whoring after false gods. How do you react to the charge of Peter Moss and a number of critics that you are a pessimist? I would call myself a universal pessimist but a cosmic optimist. My novels examine the human condition. Just as a doctor diagnoses a physical disease I explore the spiritual ills of man. I am too old to go about preaching on the state of man, but one has to harbour hope. The very act of living today is one of hope. Goldingâs commitment to truth and reality is undying. He speaks through Samuel Mount-joy in Free Fall: âBut we are neither the innocent nor the wicked. We are the guilty. We fall down. We crawl on hands and knees. We weep and tear each other.â Or again: âI am looking for the beginning of responsibility, the beginning of darkness, the point where I began.â Golding demands from man a moral evolution, a spiritual growth worthy of his species. As he observed, âWhat the world now needs is the Homomoralis the human being who cannot kill his own kind, nor exploit them nor rob them.â Printed Pages: 208., Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd, 2003, 6, Peter Burchardt, Melbourne, 1977. First Edition. Hardcover. Good Condition/Poor. Illustrator: Luba Kyrylenko-Descy. 135 pp. Black boards with white writing and illustrations, white writing on spine. Eighteen four-page black and white illustrations, three double page illustrations and numerous small illustrations throughout text by the artist. Illustrated dustwrapper. Bottom edge shows heavy shelf wear, top of spine is likewise worn. Top corners are bumped. Between pages 93 -96 there is a fault, in that the top of the pages have been folded and subsequently not cut with the others at the time of production. Dustwrapper has a two inch closed tear at bottom front corner of book, along with creases and rubbing. There is also a small half-inch closed tears bottom left hand corner front panel. Rubbing and chipping along top edge of dustwrapper, there are creases and a small closed tear top left-hand corner of back panel. Rubbing and slight fading of the dustwrapper is also present. Central to the story is Ayres Rock (Uluru) and how the two boys, one a White, one an Aboriginal, have an adventure inside Ayres Rock to ' defeat the deadliest reptile man has known since the beginning of time.'. The author's first book. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Please refer to accompanying picture (s). Illustrator: Luba Kyrylenko-Descy. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Indigenous Cultures; Children's Books ; Mythology ; First Work; Australia; ISBN: 0959593802. ISBN/EAN: 9780959593808. Inventory No: 0100035. . 9780959593808, Peter Burchardt, 1977, 1.75, Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd, 2003. Hardcover. New. Malcolm Bradbury on William Golding Golding addressed fundamental questions of good and evil, being, wholeness and creative aspiration in a godless age. His stories were, he once said, not fables but mythsfable being an invented thing out on the surface whereas myth in something that comes out of the roots of things in the ancient sense of being a key to existence...and experience as a whole. Goldings work challenges many of the liberal and humanistic conventions of much British fiction, and there is a certain timelessness about the prosethough not the techniquewhich makes it stand monumentally apart from much contemporary writing. But it is and will surely remain a central contribution to the modern British novel. The 1983 Nobel Prize winner author, Golding had the unique distinction of being both a fabulist and a realist. Goldings works will remain of significant relevance as long as man continues to careen madly on the razors edge of so-called civilisation while his ugly true self-barbaric and greedy claims his soul in Mephistophilean triumph. At times Goldings eschatological views are sombre, but he weaves a torturous path through the paradoxes of good and evil in his novels; Pincher Martin, Darkness Visible and The Spire (to name only a few). He tried to achieve a synthesis of flesh and spirit through an illuminating reconciliation. Golding wished to salvage the soul of man from the wreckage of 20th century godlessness, entropy and the malaise of whoring after false gods. How do you react to the charge of Peter Moss and a number of critics that you are a pessimist? I would call myself a universal pessimist but a cosmic optimist. My novels examine the human condition. Just as a doctor diagnoses a physical disease I explore the spiritual ills of man. I am too old to go about preaching on the state of man, but one has to harbour hope. The very act of living today is one of hope. Goldings commitment to truth and reality is undying. He speaks through Samuel Mount-joy in Free Fall: But we are neither the innocent nor the wicked. We are the guilty. We fall down. We crawl on hands and knees. We weep and tear each other. Or again: I am looking for the beginning of responsibility, the beginning of darkness, the point where I began. Golding demands from man a moral evolution, a spiritual growth worthy of his species. As he observed, What the world now needs is the Homomoralis the human being who cannot kill his own kind, nor exploit them nor rob them. Printed Pages: 208. Novels of William GoldingIndu Kulkarni9788126902880, Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd, 2003, 6, Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd, 2003. Hardcover. New. Malcolm Bradbury on William Golding Golding addressed fundamental questions of good and evil, being, wholeness and creative aspiration in a godless age. His stories were, he once said, not fables but mythsâfable being âan invented thing out on the surface whereas myth in something that comes out of the roots of things in the ancient sense of being a key to existence...and experience as a whole. Goldingâs work challenges many of the liberal and humanistic conventions of much British fiction, and there is a certain timelessness about the proseâthough not the techniqueâwhich makes it stand monumentally apart from much contemporary writing. But it is and will surely remain a central contribution to the modern British novel. The 1983 Nobel Prize winner author, Golding had the unique distinction of being both a fabulist and a realist. Goldingâs works will remain of significant relevance as long as man continues to careen madly on the razorâs edge of so-called civilisation while his ugly true self-barbaric and greedy claims his soul in Mephistophilean triumph. At times Goldingâs eschatological views are sombre, but he weaves a torturous path through the paradoxes of good and evil in his novels; Pincher Martin, Darkness Visible and The Spire (to name only a few). He tried to achieve a synthesis of flesh and spirit through an illuminating reconciliation. Golding wished to salvage the soul of man from the wreckage of 20th century godlessness, entropy and the malaise of whoring after false gods. How do you react to the charge of Peter Moss and a number of critics that you are a pessimist? I would call myself a universal pessimist but a cosmic optimist. My novels examine the human condition. Just as a doctor diagnoses a physical disease I explore the spiritual ills of man. I am too old to go about preaching on the state of man, but one has to harbour hope. The very act of living today is one of hope. Goldingâs commitment to truth and reality is undying. He speaks through Samuel Mount-joy in Free Fall: âBut we are neither the innocent nor the wicked. We are the guilty. We fall down. We crawl on hands and knees. We weep and tear each other.â Or again: âI am looking for the beginning of responsibility, the beginning of darkness, the point where I began.â Golding demands from man a moral evolution, a spiritual growth worthy of his species. As he observed, âWhat the world now needs is the Homomoralis the human being who cannot kill his own kind, nor exploit them nor rob them.â Printed Pages: 208., Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd, 2003, 6, Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd, 2003. Hardcover. New. Malcolm Bradbury on William Golding Golding addressed fundamental questions of good and evil, being, wholeness and creative aspiration in a godless age. His stories were, he once said, not fables but mythsâfable being âan invented thing out on the surface whereas myth in something that comes out of the roots of things in the ancient sense of being a key to existence...and experience as a whole. Goldingâs work challenges many of the liberal and humanistic conventions of much British fiction, and there is a certain timelessness about the proseâthough not the techniqueâwhich makes it stand monumentally apart from much contemporary writing. But it is and will surely remain a central contribution to the modern British novel. The 1983 Nobel Prize winner author, Golding had the unique distinction of being both a fabulist and a realist. Goldingâs works will remain of significant relevance as long as man continues to careen madly on the razorâs edge of so-called civilisation while his ugly true self-barbaric and greedy claims his soul in Mephistophilean triumph. At times Goldingâs eschatological views are sombre, but he weaves a torturous path through the paradoxes of good and evil in his novels; Pincher Martin, Darkness Visible and The Spire (to name only a few). He tried to achieve a synthesis of flesh and spirit through an illuminating reconciliation. Golding wished to salvage the soul of man from the wreckage of 20th century godlessness, entropy and the malaise of whoring after false gods. How do you react to the charge of Peter Moss and a number of critics that you are a pessimist? I would call myself a universal pessimist but a cosmic optimist. My novels examine the human condition. Just as a doctor diagnoses a physical disease I explore the spiritual ills of man. I am too old to go about preaching on the state of man, but one has to harbour hope. The very act of living today is one of hope. Goldingâs commitment to truth and reality is undying. He speaks through Samuel Mount-joy in Free Fall: âBut we are neither the innocent nor the wicked. We are the guilty. We fall down. We crawl on hands and knees. We weep and tear each other.â Or again: âI am looking for the beginning of responsibility, the beginning of darkness, the point where I began.â Golding demands from man a moral evolution, a spiritual growth worthy of his species. As he observed, âWhat the world now needs is the Homomoralis the human being who cannot kill his own kind, nor exploit them nor rob them.â Printed Pages: 208., Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd, 2003, 6, Acropolis Books. Used - Good. Item in good condition and has highlighting/writing on text. Used texts may not contain supplemental items such as CDs, info-trac etc..., Acropolis Books, 2.5, William Shakespeare's life, obscured by literary mythology, has remained an enigma for the past 400 years, and the aim of this book is to reveal the mystery behind this enigma. It is a "quest for Shakespeare", unravelling a series of strands in order to understand the man and the major influences which shaped his life and writing. Razzell, formerly at the University of London, has written a fascinating book.An excellent copy. Pages are clean, bright and unmarked. Cloth boards are tight and clean. DJ is unclipped and in very good condition, with some spine sunning.All now protected in professional clear book wrapper. 188pp with B&W plates, index and full notes, Caliban Books, 1990, 3.5, Sheffield Academic Press, 2003. ~Owner's name sticker to inside front board. ~Robust packaging. All UK orders with tracking, overseas orders on request.. Hardback. Near Fine. xii, 276pp. No dustwrapper. Binding sound, text unmarked., Sheffield Academic Press, 2003, 4<