Recherche

The Transcendental Way to God According to Bernard Lonergan

Dossiers

ActuaLitté

Dossier

Mangas.io : l’avenir du manga numérique ?

Une application pour lire ses mangas en illimité et légalement : la communauté l’attend depuis des années. Cependant, aucune solution ne semble pour l’instant satisfaire les millions de lecteurs pirates français... Mais grâce à son système à l’abonnement, Mangas.io tente de faire évoluer le marché du manga numérique. 

ActuaLitté

Dossier

Romans, nouveautés : les livres de Bernard Minier

Bernard Minier est un auteur de thrillers et de romans policiers français né en 1960 à Béziers (Hérault), dont les romans sont caractérisés par des intrigues sombres et complexes, une grande précision dans la description des environnements naturels et des personnages qui explorent les recoins les plus sombres de leur âme. 

ActuaLitté

Dossier

Romans, essais, dictées : tous les livres de Bernard Pivot

Bernard Pivot, né le 5 mai 1935 à Lyon et décédé le 6 mai 2024, est une figure emblématique de la culture française, célèbre pour son rôle de journaliste, animateur de télévision et défenseur passionné de la langue française. 

ActuaLitté

Dossier

Livres, actualités : tout sur Guillaume Musso

Né le 6 juin 1974 à Antibes, Guillaume Musso est un habitué, depuis plusieurs années, des classements des meilleures ventes. Pourtant, son premier livre, Skidamarink, publié en 2001, reste sous les radars : il lui faudra attendre Et après..., publié en 2004 chez XO Éditions pour accéder à un plus grand nombre de lecteurs. C'est un succès, porté au cinéma en 2009 avec au casting John Malkovich, Romain Duris ou encore Evangeline Lilly...

ActuaLitté

Dossier

L'oiseau moqueur de Harper Lee, un chef d'oeuvre à la peau dure

L’histoire que raconte Jean Louise Finch, alors âgée de six ans, est devenue l’un des plus grands classiques de la littérature américaine. To Kill a Mockingbird, prix Pulitzer Littérature 1961, un an après sa sortie, est réputé pour son humour et sa chaleur, alors qu’il traite de viol et d’inégalité raciale.

ActuaLitté

Dossier

Livres, actualités : tout sur Ray Bradbury

Né le 22 août 1920, Ray Bradbury est un des grands noms de la littérature de science-fiction américaine, particulièrement réputé pour la qualité de ses nouvelles, notamment grâce à ses recueils L'Homme illustré (1951), Un remède à la mélancolie (1958) ou encore les Chroniques martiennes (1950). 

Extraits

ActuaLitté

Non classé

The Transcendental Way to God According to Bernard Lonergan

The question of God is or can be the central question of all human existence. This dissertation is an attempt to present the philosophical way to God according to Bernard Lonergan - one of the most prominent exponents of modern Catholic philosophy and theology. According to the inner dialectic between that which is existential and that which is rational in human knowing of God, the new meta-proof of God's existence is presented in the perspective of existential conditions for the acceptance of such a proof. Particular attention is devoted to the solution of Kant's critical problem, which is a necessary condition for every critically grounded affirmation of God, for every affirmation up to our time. In this way a sketch of the philosophy of God is presented here which can well serve as a sketch of the textbook in this philosophy.

12/1991

ActuaLitté

Poésie

Epilepsy: the invisible pain

They say life is a long stretch of a calm river, but not for everyone ! She was for me until the day when everything rocked, the day my destiny was changed dramatically. People do not realize how life can be so sweet and so beautiful. They complain all day long for trivialities. They are not even aware that they have before their eyes the most beautiful wealth : the luck and happiness of living in good health. I was rich before. Now I am poor because my child has an incurable disease, that has currently no hope of being healed. As a parent, how can we accept that ? , How to continue living carrying the bundle of pain in my head ? , How to overcome this feeling of helplessness ? When I started speaking to my heart, I didn't know myself that this was the beginning of a new life : a rebirth as a poet. When I learnt that my 7-year-old daughter was suffering from the Dravet Syndrome, a rare genetic epileptic encephalopathy, this was like an earthquake in my life. Then, I needed to write in order to express my sorrow and my pain. Words and rhymes came naturally to my mind. This was obvious that poetry would be my survival weapon.

01/2019

ActuaLitté

Anglais apprentissage

Acacia thorn in my heart

I started writing "Acacia thorn in my heart" after reading the book of a white South African woman about her childhood in the same region as mine but relating a completely different experience. She had maids, her father drove her to school and she played with real toys. I lived in the heart of the country, away from everything and had to walk five miles to go to school. I was born in Natal. My father rented a plot of land from a white owner to do market gardening. Although Indian families tended not to educate daughters, our parents decided that education was a priority for us. Despite financial difficulties, they were able to send us to school. We had to get up at five o'clock in order to catch the school train. In winter, as we were scantily clad, we shivered all the way to the station.

09/2001

ActuaLitté

Religion

Universalism according to the Gospel of Matthew

This work studies the theme of universalism, namely the sharing of the gentile nations in salvation according to the gospel of Matthew. The method being employed is synchronic. All the texts that are relevant to the theme are interpreted, taking into account their context and their synoptic parallels. The study reveals that the theme of universalism is well organized and gradually developed in the gospel of Matthew. It constitutes one important theme.

07/1993

ActuaLitté

Histoire internationale

One Artist on Five Continents

Elisabet Delbrück (1876-1967) was one of a number of Germans who came to New Zealand in the late 1930s. Unlike most, she had not intended to emigrate but was touring the country when World War II broke out. She was at first forbidden to leave and then chose to remain in Wellington. Her thirty years in Mahina Bay on Wellington harbour had a profound effect on all who knew her. This study aims to discover why she was so remarkable. It explores her early life, her marriage into a prominent German family and her qualification as an artist. She turned this into a profession, teaching and exhibiting on five continents in the 1920s and 1930s. She always travelled alone, observing the customs and beliefs of the people she met. In Australia and New Zealand in 1938 and 1939 she was wrongly suspected of spreading Nazi propaganda. Her story is also the story of a heroic group of Wellingtonians who helped her in the 1940s and valued her friendship till her death.

12/2011

ActuaLitté

Histoire et Philosophiesophie

WHY SEX MATTERS. A Darwinian Look at Human Behavior

Why are men, like other primate usually the aggressors and risk takers? Why do women typically have fewer sexual partners? Why is killing infants routine in some cultures, but forbidden in others? Why is incest everywhere taboo? Bobbi Low ranges from ancient Rome to modern America, from the Amazon to the Arctic, and from single-celled organisms to international politics to show that these and many other questions about human behavior largely come down to evolution and sex. More precisely, as she shows in this uniquely comprehensive and accessible survey of behavioral and evolutionary ecology, they come down to the basic principle that all organisms evolved to maximize their reproductive success and seek resources to do so. Low begins by reviewing the fundamental arguments and assumptions of behavioral ecology: selfish genes, conflicts of interest, and the tendency for sexes to reproduce through different behaviors. She explains why in primate species-from chimpanzees and apes to humans-males seek to spread their genes by devoting extraordinary efforts to finding mates, while females find it profitable to expend more effort on parenting. Low illustrates these sexual differences among humans by showing that in places as diverse as the parishes of nineteenth-century Sweden, the villages of seventeenth-century China, and the forests of twentieth-century Brasil, men have tended to seek power and resources, from cattle to money, to attract mates, while women have sought a secure environment for raising children. She makes it clear, however, they have not done so simply through individual efforts or in a vacuum, but that men and women act in complex ways that involve cooperation and coalition building and that are shaped by culture, technology, tradition, and the availability of resources. Low also considers how file evolutionary drive to acquire resources leads to environmental degradation and warfare and asks whether our behavior could be channeled in more constructive ways. Why Sex Matters is a compelling work of biology, sociology, and anthropology and a penetrating study of the deep motivations that underlie individual and social behavior.

01/2000

Tous les articles

ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté
ActuaLitté