Author: Suna Senman
Publisher: Author House
ISBN: 1477212612
Category : Self-Help
Languages : en
Pages : 193
Book Description
"A vital resource for beginners, young adults, and seasoned spiritual warriors, as they transform self-centered thinking into an experience of Peace, with the self and with others." -- Eliza Ladd Schwarz, award-winning performance artist and professor of Theater Arts at Marymount Manhattan College. A thought-provoking space of contemplation, which draws the reader in This isnt a one-time read book, but a book that can be utilized many times in ones life, as the awareness of self is being developed. Life Coaching Magazine Peace is written with intelligence, honesty, and artistry. Sunas passionate writing will compel the reader to become an individual ambassador for peace. Jennifer Crumpley, LCSW-R, Director, Collaborative Initiatives at Turnaround for Children Insightful, flows with grace This book is a meditation on lifea treasure. David H. Fastiggi, founder, Eartheaven Academy, author of Your True Identity and In the Beginning...Eartheaven This book is a catalyst to awaken the heart. It allows us to do an exercise in mindfulness and soul-searching that leads to a meaningful journey of self-discovery. Doris Crompton, intuitive energy healer, RM, CECP Suna Senman has once more applied her creative philosophical abilities, to take you on a thought-provoking journey toward clarifying and enlarging your world. --Pastor Helen Kelley, New Beginnings Assembly of God
Peace
Author: Suna Senman
Publisher: Author House
ISBN: 1477212612
Category : Self-Help
Languages : en
Pages : 193
Book Description
"A vital resource for beginners, young adults, and seasoned spiritual warriors, as they transform self-centered thinking into an experience of Peace, with the self and with others." -- Eliza Ladd Schwarz, award-winning performance artist and professor of Theater Arts at Marymount Manhattan College. A thought-provoking space of contemplation, which draws the reader in This isnt a one-time read book, but a book that can be utilized many times in ones life, as the awareness of self is being developed. Life Coaching Magazine Peace is written with intelligence, honesty, and artistry. Sunas passionate writing will compel the reader to become an individual ambassador for peace. Jennifer Crumpley, LCSW-R, Director, Collaborative Initiatives at Turnaround for Children Insightful, flows with grace This book is a meditation on lifea treasure. David H. Fastiggi, founder, Eartheaven Academy, author of Your True Identity and In the Beginning...Eartheaven This book is a catalyst to awaken the heart. It allows us to do an exercise in mindfulness and soul-searching that leads to a meaningful journey of self-discovery. Doris Crompton, intuitive energy healer, RM, CECP Suna Senman has once more applied her creative philosophical abilities, to take you on a thought-provoking journey toward clarifying and enlarging your world. --Pastor Helen Kelley, New Beginnings Assembly of God
Publisher: Author House
ISBN: 1477212612
Category : Self-Help
Languages : en
Pages : 193
Book Description
"A vital resource for beginners, young adults, and seasoned spiritual warriors, as they transform self-centered thinking into an experience of Peace, with the self and with others." -- Eliza Ladd Schwarz, award-winning performance artist and professor of Theater Arts at Marymount Manhattan College. A thought-provoking space of contemplation, which draws the reader in This isnt a one-time read book, but a book that can be utilized many times in ones life, as the awareness of self is being developed. Life Coaching Magazine Peace is written with intelligence, honesty, and artistry. Sunas passionate writing will compel the reader to become an individual ambassador for peace. Jennifer Crumpley, LCSW-R, Director, Collaborative Initiatives at Turnaround for Children Insightful, flows with grace This book is a meditation on lifea treasure. David H. Fastiggi, founder, Eartheaven Academy, author of Your True Identity and In the Beginning...Eartheaven This book is a catalyst to awaken the heart. It allows us to do an exercise in mindfulness and soul-searching that leads to a meaningful journey of self-discovery. Doris Crompton, intuitive energy healer, RM, CECP Suna Senman has once more applied her creative philosophical abilities, to take you on a thought-provoking journey toward clarifying and enlarging your world. --Pastor Helen Kelley, New Beginnings Assembly of God
The Peace Cross Book
Author: Henry Yates Satterlee
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Crosses
Languages : en
Pages : 96
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Crosses
Languages : en
Pages : 96
Book Description
Peace, Literature, and Art - Volume I
Author: Ada Aharoni
Publisher: EOLSS Publications
ISBN: 1848260768
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 396
Book Description
Peace, Literature, and Art is the component of Encyclopedia of Social Sciences and Humanities in the global Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS), which is an integrated compendium of twenty one Encyclopedias. Culture is the essence of individual and national identity. What children and people read and watch and the kind of Culture, Literature and Media, they are exposed to, through home, education and society - provide them with basic values, attitudes and norms which affect and motivate them throughout their lives. It is of crucial importance therefore, that those stories we are exposed to, at the socio-cultural and educational levels, which we watch on television, in films and on the Internet, and which we read - should be peaceful ones, which open our eyes to a humane world that can prosper from peace and harmony. This Theme on Peace, Literature, and Art deals, in two volumes and cover several topics related to Peace Education: Definition, Approaches, and Future Directions; Importance of a Literature and a Culture of Peace These two volumes are aimed at the following five major target audiences: University and College Students Educators, Professional Practitioners, Research Personnel and Policy Analysts, Managers, and Decision Makers, NGOs and GOs.
Publisher: EOLSS Publications
ISBN: 1848260768
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 396
Book Description
Peace, Literature, and Art is the component of Encyclopedia of Social Sciences and Humanities in the global Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS), which is an integrated compendium of twenty one Encyclopedias. Culture is the essence of individual and national identity. What children and people read and watch and the kind of Culture, Literature and Media, they are exposed to, through home, education and society - provide them with basic values, attitudes and norms which affect and motivate them throughout their lives. It is of crucial importance therefore, that those stories we are exposed to, at the socio-cultural and educational levels, which we watch on television, in films and on the Internet, and which we read - should be peaceful ones, which open our eyes to a humane world that can prosper from peace and harmony. This Theme on Peace, Literature, and Art deals, in two volumes and cover several topics related to Peace Education: Definition, Approaches, and Future Directions; Importance of a Literature and a Culture of Peace These two volumes are aimed at the following five major target audiences: University and College Students Educators, Professional Practitioners, Research Personnel and Policy Analysts, Managers, and Decision Makers, NGOs and GOs.
Think
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 592
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 592
Book Description
Towards a Dark Horizon
Author: Maureen Reynolds
Publisher: Black & White Publishing
ISBN: 1845026691
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 405
Book Description
It is the 1930s and having survived the Great Depression the Neill family must now face up to the hardships of war. The legacy Ann Neill has inherited from her kindly employer has been a godsend but just as their lives seem set to improve, the threat of war with Germany looms and they seem headed for a similarly dark horizon. Full of dark family secrets, Towards A Dark Horizon tells the next part of the story of Ann and Lilly Neill, their father Johnny as well as the Ryan clan and the budding relationship between Danny and Maddie. But in the turbulent years before and after the start of the Second World War, no one can escape the conflict or what fate has in store. In Towards A Dark Horizon, Maureen Reynolds continues her compelling story describing the trials and tribulations of working-class life in the close-knit community of pre-war and wartime Dundee.
Publisher: Black & White Publishing
ISBN: 1845026691
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 405
Book Description
It is the 1930s and having survived the Great Depression the Neill family must now face up to the hardships of war. The legacy Ann Neill has inherited from her kindly employer has been a godsend but just as their lives seem set to improve, the threat of war with Germany looms and they seem headed for a similarly dark horizon. Full of dark family secrets, Towards A Dark Horizon tells the next part of the story of Ann and Lilly Neill, their father Johnny as well as the Ryan clan and the budding relationship between Danny and Maddie. But in the turbulent years before and after the start of the Second World War, no one can escape the conflict or what fate has in store. In Towards A Dark Horizon, Maureen Reynolds continues her compelling story describing the trials and tribulations of working-class life in the close-knit community of pre-war and wartime Dundee.
Palestine's Horizon
Author: Richard A. Falk
Publisher: Pluto Press (UK)
ISBN: 9780745399751
Category : History
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
The former UN Special Rapporteur for Palestine brings his life's work together to discuss how the region can find peace
Publisher: Pluto Press (UK)
ISBN: 9780745399751
Category : History
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
The former UN Special Rapporteur for Palestine brings his life's work together to discuss how the region can find peace
Some Kind of Peace
Author: Camilla Grebe
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
ISBN: 1451654618
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 323
Book Description
Tells the story of a young, recently widowed psychologist who is afraid of the dark and whose past comes to haunt her as she tries to solve crimes, beginning with the brutal murder of one of her patients.
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
ISBN: 1451654618
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 323
Book Description
Tells the story of a young, recently widowed psychologist who is afraid of the dark and whose past comes to haunt her as she tries to solve crimes, beginning with the brutal murder of one of her patients.
Heroes of Peace
Author: William Victor Holley
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 330
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 330
Book Description
The Bellman
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 744
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 744
Book Description
Towards an Enduring Peace
Author: Various Authors
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
ISBN: 1613108753
Category : Political Science
Languages : en
Pages : 391
Book Description
When the storm has gone by and the skies after clearing have softened, we may discover that a corrected perspective is the result of the war that we are most conscious of. Familiar presumptions will appear foreshortened, and new distances of fact and possibility will lie before us. Before the fateful midsummer of 1914 the most thoughtful part of mankind confidently held a lot of agreeable presumptions which undoubtedly influenced individual and collective conduct. The more intangible of them were grouped under such name symbols as “idealism,” “humanitarian impulse,” “human brotherhood,” “Christian civilization.” The workaday ones were pigeonholed under the rubric: “enlightened economic interest.” Between the practical and the aspirational were distributed all the excellent Aristotelian middle course presumptions of the “rule of reason” order. And why not? The nineteenth century had closed in a blaze of scientific glory. By patient inductive research the human mind had found out nature’s way on earth and in the heavens, and with daring invention had turned knowledge to immediate practical account. The struggle for existence had become a mighty enterprise of progress. Steam and electricity had brought the utmost parts of the world together. Upon substantial material foundations the twentieth century would build a world republic, wherein justice should apportion abundance. Upon presumption we reared the tower of expectation. Yet on the horizon we might have seen—some of us did see—a thickening haze and warning thunderheads. Not much was said about them, but to some it seemed that the world behaved as if it felt the tension of a rising storm. With nervous eagerness the nations pushed their way into the domains of the backward peoples. They sought concessions, opportunities for investment, command of resources, exclusive trade, spheres of influence. Private negotiations were backed by diplomacy, and year after year diplomacy was backed by an ever more impressive show of naval and military power. But we did not believe that the Great War impended. There would still be restricted wars here and there of course, but more and more they could be prevented. The human mind that had mastered nature’s way could master and control the ways of man. Economic interest would bring its resistless strength to bear against the mad makers of the wastes of war. A sensitive conscience would revolt against the cruelties of war. Reason, which had invented rules and agencies to keep the peace within the state, would devise tribunals and procedures to substitute a rational adjustment of differences for the arbitrament of war between states. The world has recovered from disaster before now, it will recover again. Presumptions that disappointed have been reexamined and brought into truer drawing. Expectation has been more broadly built, it will be more broadly built again. There is conscience in mankind, and the war has sublimely revealed it, as it has revealed also undreamed of survivals of faithlessness and cruelty. The presumption of rational control in human affairs has been foreshortened, but not painted out. In the background stand forth as grim realities, forces of fear, distrust, envy, ignorance, and hate that we had thought were ghosts. Conscience is as strong and as sensitive as we believed it to be; reason is as effective as we presumed; but the forces arrayed against them we now see are mightier than we knew. So now we ask, By what power shall conscience and reason be reinforced, and the surviving forces of barbarism be driven back? There is but one answer left, all others have been shot to pieces. Conscience and reason are effective when they organize material energies, not when they dissipate themselves in dreams. Conscience and reason must assemble, coördinate, and bring to bear the economic resources and the physical energies of the civilized world to narrow the area and to diminish the frequency of war.
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
ISBN: 1613108753
Category : Political Science
Languages : en
Pages : 391
Book Description
When the storm has gone by and the skies after clearing have softened, we may discover that a corrected perspective is the result of the war that we are most conscious of. Familiar presumptions will appear foreshortened, and new distances of fact and possibility will lie before us. Before the fateful midsummer of 1914 the most thoughtful part of mankind confidently held a lot of agreeable presumptions which undoubtedly influenced individual and collective conduct. The more intangible of them were grouped under such name symbols as “idealism,” “humanitarian impulse,” “human brotherhood,” “Christian civilization.” The workaday ones were pigeonholed under the rubric: “enlightened economic interest.” Between the practical and the aspirational were distributed all the excellent Aristotelian middle course presumptions of the “rule of reason” order. And why not? The nineteenth century had closed in a blaze of scientific glory. By patient inductive research the human mind had found out nature’s way on earth and in the heavens, and with daring invention had turned knowledge to immediate practical account. The struggle for existence had become a mighty enterprise of progress. Steam and electricity had brought the utmost parts of the world together. Upon substantial material foundations the twentieth century would build a world republic, wherein justice should apportion abundance. Upon presumption we reared the tower of expectation. Yet on the horizon we might have seen—some of us did see—a thickening haze and warning thunderheads. Not much was said about them, but to some it seemed that the world behaved as if it felt the tension of a rising storm. With nervous eagerness the nations pushed their way into the domains of the backward peoples. They sought concessions, opportunities for investment, command of resources, exclusive trade, spheres of influence. Private negotiations were backed by diplomacy, and year after year diplomacy was backed by an ever more impressive show of naval and military power. But we did not believe that the Great War impended. There would still be restricted wars here and there of course, but more and more they could be prevented. The human mind that had mastered nature’s way could master and control the ways of man. Economic interest would bring its resistless strength to bear against the mad makers of the wastes of war. A sensitive conscience would revolt against the cruelties of war. Reason, which had invented rules and agencies to keep the peace within the state, would devise tribunals and procedures to substitute a rational adjustment of differences for the arbitrament of war between states. The world has recovered from disaster before now, it will recover again. Presumptions that disappointed have been reexamined and brought into truer drawing. Expectation has been more broadly built, it will be more broadly built again. There is conscience in mankind, and the war has sublimely revealed it, as it has revealed also undreamed of survivals of faithlessness and cruelty. The presumption of rational control in human affairs has been foreshortened, but not painted out. In the background stand forth as grim realities, forces of fear, distrust, envy, ignorance, and hate that we had thought were ghosts. Conscience is as strong and as sensitive as we believed it to be; reason is as effective as we presumed; but the forces arrayed against them we now see are mightier than we knew. So now we ask, By what power shall conscience and reason be reinforced, and the surviving forces of barbarism be driven back? There is but one answer left, all others have been shot to pieces. Conscience and reason are effective when they organize material energies, not when they dissipate themselves in dreams. Conscience and reason must assemble, coördinate, and bring to bear the economic resources and the physical energies of the civilized world to narrow the area and to diminish the frequency of war.