Author: Claire Sartin
Publisher: Alpha Book Publisher
ISBN:
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 156
Book Description
A collection of short written works exploring a multitude of theories and aspects of an apocalypse. The variety of world-ending scenarios also showcases death with a comedic flare. Characters span across different cultures but all feel the cold grip of fear, death and apocalyptic tragedy.
Musings of an Apocalyptic Mind
Author: Claire Sartin
Publisher: Alpha Book Publisher
ISBN:
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 156
Book Description
A collection of short written works exploring a multitude of theories and aspects of an apocalypse. The variety of world-ending scenarios also showcases death with a comedic flare. Characters span across different cultures but all feel the cold grip of fear, death and apocalyptic tragedy.
Publisher: Alpha Book Publisher
ISBN:
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 156
Book Description
A collection of short written works exploring a multitude of theories and aspects of an apocalypse. The variety of world-ending scenarios also showcases death with a comedic flare. Characters span across different cultures but all feel the cold grip of fear, death and apocalyptic tragedy.
Musings of an Apocalyptic Mind
Author: Claire Sartin
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Death
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
A collection of works that explores the many facets of death, society's inevitable doom, and the many different possibilities of an apocalypse.
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Death
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
A collection of works that explores the many facets of death, society's inevitable doom, and the many different possibilities of an apocalypse.
The Last Myth
Author: Matthew Barrett Gross
Publisher: Prometheus Books
ISBN: 1616145749
Category : Social Science
Languages : en
Pages : 220
Book Description
During the first dozen years of the twenty-first century, apocalyptic anticipation in America has leapt from the cultish to the mainstream. Today, nearly 60 percent of Americans believe that the events foretold in the book of Revelation will come true. But many secular readers also seem hungry for catastrophe and have propelled books about peak oil, global warming, and the end of civilization into bestsellers. How did we come to live in a culture obsessed by the belief that the end is near? The Last Myth explains why apocalyptic beliefs are surging within the American mainstream today. Demonstrating that our expectation of the end of the world is a surprisingly recent development in human thought, the book reveals the profound influence of apocalyptic thinking on America’s past, present, and future.
Publisher: Prometheus Books
ISBN: 1616145749
Category : Social Science
Languages : en
Pages : 220
Book Description
During the first dozen years of the twenty-first century, apocalyptic anticipation in America has leapt from the cultish to the mainstream. Today, nearly 60 percent of Americans believe that the events foretold in the book of Revelation will come true. But many secular readers also seem hungry for catastrophe and have propelled books about peak oil, global warming, and the end of civilization into bestsellers. How did we come to live in a culture obsessed by the belief that the end is near? The Last Myth explains why apocalyptic beliefs are surging within the American mainstream today. Demonstrating that our expectation of the end of the world is a surprisingly recent development in human thought, the book reveals the profound influence of apocalyptic thinking on America’s past, present, and future.
Conversations about the End of Time
Author: Umberto Eco
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Philosophy
Languages : en
Pages : 238
Book Description
How has the Western world responded in the past to repeated claims that the end of the world is nigh? How do different religions understand what is ment by the end of the world? What have science and philosophy got to say about the end of time? Why do people suffer? What is hell? Is time cyclical or linear? These are just a few of the questions tackled by Umberto Eco, Stephen Jay Gould, Jean Carriere and Jean-Paul Delumeau in a series of conversations. Mixing the religious with the profane and the deeply profound with the humorous, the book explores anything and everything from the concept of time as embedded in language to the reasons why war become an industrialized phenomenon in the 20th century.
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Philosophy
Languages : en
Pages : 238
Book Description
How has the Western world responded in the past to repeated claims that the end of the world is nigh? How do different religions understand what is ment by the end of the world? What have science and philosophy got to say about the end of time? Why do people suffer? What is hell? Is time cyclical or linear? These are just a few of the questions tackled by Umberto Eco, Stephen Jay Gould, Jean Carriere and Jean-Paul Delumeau in a series of conversations. Mixing the religious with the profane and the deeply profound with the humorous, the book explores anything and everything from the concept of time as embedded in language to the reasons why war become an industrialized phenomenon in the 20th century.
What God Would Have Known
Author: J L Schellenberg
Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 0198912323
Category : Philosophy
Languages : en
Pages : 215
Book Description
In this book, J. L. Schellenberg argues that humanity has developed spiritually and morally in a way that would have been reflected in Christian doctrine if that doctrine had been inspired by a good and all-knowing God, and that Christian doctrine cannot therefore be related to such a God in the way that it purports to be.
Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 0198912323
Category : Philosophy
Languages : en
Pages : 215
Book Description
In this book, J. L. Schellenberg argues that humanity has developed spiritually and morally in a way that would have been reflected in Christian doctrine if that doctrine had been inspired by a good and all-knowing God, and that Christian doctrine cannot therefore be related to such a God in the way that it purports to be.
Ideal Minds
Author: Michael Trask
Publisher: Cornell University Press
ISBN: 1501752456
Category : Literary Criticism
Languages : en
Pages : 255
Book Description
Following the 1960s, that decade's focus on consciousness-raising transformed into an array of intellectual projects far afield of movement politics. The mind's powers came to preoccupy a range of thinkers and writers: ethicists pursuing contractual theories of justice, radical ecologists interested in the paleolithic brain, seventies cultists, and the devout of both evangelical and New Age persuasions. In Ideal Minds, Michael Trask presents a boldly revisionist argument about the revival of subjectivity in postmodern American culture, connecting familiar figures within the seventies intellectual landscape who share a commitment to what he calls "neo-idealism" as a weapon in the struggle against discredited materialist and behaviorist worldviews. In a heterodox intellectual and literary history of the 1970s, Ideal Minds mixes ideas from cognitive science, philosophy of mind, moral philosophy, deep ecology, political theory, science fiction, neoclassical economics, and the sociology of religion. Trask also delves into the decade's more esoteric branches of learning, including Scientology, anarchist theory, rapture prophesies, psychic channeling, and neo-Malthusianism. Through this investigation, Trask argues that a dramatic inflation in the value of consciousness and autonomy beginning in the 1970s accompanied a growing argument about the state's inability to safeguard such values. Ultimately, the thinkers Trask analyzes—John Rawls, Arne Naess, L. Ron Hubbard, Hal Lindsey, Philip Dick, Ursula Le Guin, Edward Abbey, William Burroughs, John Irving, and James Merrill—found alternatives to statism in conditions that would lend intellectual support to the consolidation of these concepts in the radical free market ideologies of the 1980s.
Publisher: Cornell University Press
ISBN: 1501752456
Category : Literary Criticism
Languages : en
Pages : 255
Book Description
Following the 1960s, that decade's focus on consciousness-raising transformed into an array of intellectual projects far afield of movement politics. The mind's powers came to preoccupy a range of thinkers and writers: ethicists pursuing contractual theories of justice, radical ecologists interested in the paleolithic brain, seventies cultists, and the devout of both evangelical and New Age persuasions. In Ideal Minds, Michael Trask presents a boldly revisionist argument about the revival of subjectivity in postmodern American culture, connecting familiar figures within the seventies intellectual landscape who share a commitment to what he calls "neo-idealism" as a weapon in the struggle against discredited materialist and behaviorist worldviews. In a heterodox intellectual and literary history of the 1970s, Ideal Minds mixes ideas from cognitive science, philosophy of mind, moral philosophy, deep ecology, political theory, science fiction, neoclassical economics, and the sociology of religion. Trask also delves into the decade's more esoteric branches of learning, including Scientology, anarchist theory, rapture prophesies, psychic channeling, and neo-Malthusianism. Through this investigation, Trask argues that a dramatic inflation in the value of consciousness and autonomy beginning in the 1970s accompanied a growing argument about the state's inability to safeguard such values. Ultimately, the thinkers Trask analyzes—John Rawls, Arne Naess, L. Ron Hubbard, Hal Lindsey, Philip Dick, Ursula Le Guin, Edward Abbey, William Burroughs, John Irving, and James Merrill—found alternatives to statism in conditions that would lend intellectual support to the consolidation of these concepts in the radical free market ideologies of the 1980s.
Apocalypse and Millennium in English Romantic Poetry
Author: Morton D. Paley
Publisher: Clarendon Press
ISBN: 0191584681
Category : Literary Criticism
Languages : en
Pages : 338
Book Description
The interrelationship of the ideas of apocalypse and millennium is a dominant concern of British Romanticism. The Book of Revelation provides a model of history in which apocalypse is followed by millennium, but in their various ways the major Romantic poets - Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Keats, and Shelley - question and even at times undermine the possibility of a successful secularization of this model. No matter how confidently the sequence of apocalypse and millennium seems to be affirmed in some of the major works of the period, the issue is always in doubt: the fear that millennium may not ensue emerges as a significant, if often repressed, theme in the great works of the period. Related to it is the tension in Romantic poetry between conflicting models of history itself: history as teleology, developing towards end time and millennium, and history as purposeless cycle. This subject-matter is traced through a selection of works by the major poets, partly through an exposition of their underlying intellectual traditions, and partly through a close examination of the poems themselves.
Publisher: Clarendon Press
ISBN: 0191584681
Category : Literary Criticism
Languages : en
Pages : 338
Book Description
The interrelationship of the ideas of apocalypse and millennium is a dominant concern of British Romanticism. The Book of Revelation provides a model of history in which apocalypse is followed by millennium, but in their various ways the major Romantic poets - Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Keats, and Shelley - question and even at times undermine the possibility of a successful secularization of this model. No matter how confidently the sequence of apocalypse and millennium seems to be affirmed in some of the major works of the period, the issue is always in doubt: the fear that millennium may not ensue emerges as a significant, if often repressed, theme in the great works of the period. Related to it is the tension in Romantic poetry between conflicting models of history itself: history as teleology, developing towards end time and millennium, and history as purposeless cycle. This subject-matter is traced through a selection of works by the major poets, partly through an exposition of their underlying intellectual traditions, and partly through a close examination of the poems themselves.
Pre-Apocalypse I
Author: Jeremy Westerman
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
ISBN: 1543464475
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 524
Book Description
Gage Moorland, a Delta Force leader’s son, gets recruited by a military academy’s secret side. The brightest, most capable cadets are recruited to go to space to hopefully find ways to beat the reptilians. The reptilians have been humanity’s nemesis for eons, and this battle comes to the fore as Gage must meet a personal challenge from the head reptilian over the earth and moon. Gage’s innovative training from the age of twelve—he is now seventeen—gives him a shot at overcoming reptilian dominance. The Serpent’s control over humanity is exposed through analysis of secret societies and how they seek to permanently enslave mankind through the New World Order. CERN’s influence is also exposed with their plans to resurrect their former god Nimrod so that he can either become the antichrist or the beast of Revelations. His resurrection is set for September 23, 2017, with Revelation 12’s fulfillment in the stars.
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
ISBN: 1543464475
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 524
Book Description
Gage Moorland, a Delta Force leader’s son, gets recruited by a military academy’s secret side. The brightest, most capable cadets are recruited to go to space to hopefully find ways to beat the reptilians. The reptilians have been humanity’s nemesis for eons, and this battle comes to the fore as Gage must meet a personal challenge from the head reptilian over the earth and moon. Gage’s innovative training from the age of twelve—he is now seventeen—gives him a shot at overcoming reptilian dominance. The Serpent’s control over humanity is exposed through analysis of secret societies and how they seek to permanently enslave mankind through the New World Order. CERN’s influence is also exposed with their plans to resurrect their former god Nimrod so that he can either become the antichrist or the beast of Revelations. His resurrection is set for September 23, 2017, with Revelation 12’s fulfillment in the stars.
The Electric Kingdom
Author: David Arnold
Publisher: Penguin
ISBN: 0593202244
Category : Young Adult Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 449
Book Description
New York Times bestseller David Arnold's most ambitious novel to date; Station Eleven meets The 5th Wave in a genre-smashing story of survival, hope, and love amid a ravaged earth. When a deadly Fly Flu sweeps the globe, it leaves a shell of the world that once was. Among the survivors are eighteen-year-old Nico and her dog, on a voyage devised by Nico's father to find a mythical portal; a young artist named Kit, raised in an old abandoned cinema; and the enigmatic Deliverer, who lives Life after Life in an attempt to put the world back together. As swarms of infected Flies roam the earth, these few survivors navigate the woods of post-apocalyptic New England, meeting others along the way, each on their own quest to find life and love in a world gone dark. The Electric Kingdom is a sweeping exploration of art, storytelling, eternal life, and above all, a testament to the notion that even in an exterminated world, one person might find beauty in another.
Publisher: Penguin
ISBN: 0593202244
Category : Young Adult Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 449
Book Description
New York Times bestseller David Arnold's most ambitious novel to date; Station Eleven meets The 5th Wave in a genre-smashing story of survival, hope, and love amid a ravaged earth. When a deadly Fly Flu sweeps the globe, it leaves a shell of the world that once was. Among the survivors are eighteen-year-old Nico and her dog, on a voyage devised by Nico's father to find a mythical portal; a young artist named Kit, raised in an old abandoned cinema; and the enigmatic Deliverer, who lives Life after Life in an attempt to put the world back together. As swarms of infected Flies roam the earth, these few survivors navigate the woods of post-apocalyptic New England, meeting others along the way, each on their own quest to find life and love in a world gone dark. The Electric Kingdom is a sweeping exploration of art, storytelling, eternal life, and above all, a testament to the notion that even in an exterminated world, one person might find beauty in another.
Apocalyptic Transformation
Author: Elizabeth K. Rosen
Publisher: Lexington Books
ISBN: 1461632935
Category : Literary Criticism
Languages : en
Pages : 239
Book Description
Apocalyptic Transformation explores how one the oldest sense-making paradigms, the apocalyptic myth, is altered when postmodern authors and filmmakers adopt it. It examines how postmodern writers adapt a fundamentally religious story for a secular audience and it proposes that even as these writers use the myth in traditional ways, they simultaneously undermine and criticize the grand narrative of apocalypse itself.
Publisher: Lexington Books
ISBN: 1461632935
Category : Literary Criticism
Languages : en
Pages : 239
Book Description
Apocalyptic Transformation explores how one the oldest sense-making paradigms, the apocalyptic myth, is altered when postmodern authors and filmmakers adopt it. It examines how postmodern writers adapt a fundamentally religious story for a secular audience and it proposes that even as these writers use the myth in traditional ways, they simultaneously undermine and criticize the grand narrative of apocalypse itself.