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Awesome book

Fantastic 2 in 1 children's book! Story book and coloring

invaluable for anyone renovating an old garden

Dazzling analysis of American malaiseEmpathy is one of Porpora's greatest strengths and some of the most remarkable parts of this book occur when he enters into dialogue with people who hold beliefs which many would dismiss as bizarre. Porpora is able to illuminate the beliefs of others, to make them intelligible. He elucidates the importance of tarot cards for one person, or another's belief that he has heard the voice of God. What Porpora brings out is the importance (or lack of importance) of these beliefs in people's lives, how they function to modify behaviour or why they have no effect on behaviour.
The book is aimed at the general reader and is extremely engaging at this level; Porpora takes advantage of endnotes to point academic readers on to other sources. Porpora sketches in an argument that the postmodern experience of the self is true phenomenologically but not ontologically, an argument which he pursues in detail in some of his academic articles.
One of the many aspects which Porpora explores is how a sense of larger purpose (in some cases provided by passionate religious belief, in others by a quest for social justice) influences people's experience of themselves. This book is more than a sociological analysis, it is a call to action.
Some book reviewers have assumed that Porpora's call is essentially Christian, but it is far broader and deeper than that. It is essentially a call to heal a broken world. Porpora's promise to his readers is that commitment to larger purposes, to the creation of a world in which social injustice no longer dominates, will enrich their lives. Selfishness, Porpora believes, is doubly impoverishing: dealing out injustice to the poor and a sense of purposeless to the comfortable.


An essential guide for constitutional scholars

Essential ground-breaking educational text.

One of the best and most thoughtful AD&D city designs

Good books get good reviews

A whimsical journey!

A little-known chapter of the Great Warof the Falklands in 1914 and the Battle of Jutland two years
later. How about the U-boat war? We never think of this as being part of World War I but it was. This was the first war in
which submarines were used. We usually associate U-boats with the Battle of the Atlantic in World War II. Raiders? No, NOT TOMB RAIDERS or RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK! I'm referring to commerce raiders. Again, we usually associate these with World War II. This was the first
Douglas Reeman novel I ever read. I got it for Christmas in
1977 and read it in high school. I was surprised that there
were commerce raiders in World War I. This is the story of the Vulkan's last voyage. The Vulkan set sail from Kiel in February 1918 and was on its last mission when World War
I ended. Read the book to find out more. I'd love to tell you
but then I'd have to knock you out.