Retales por unir

Retales por unir

Author: Esperanza Sesmero Dorado

Publisher: Lulu.com

Published: 2014-04-11

Total Pages: 150

ISBN-13: 1291830499

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"Retales Por Unir", al igual que su antecesor "Reflexionando Recortes", es un libro de poesía que surge de la necesidad de expresar esas pequeñas cosas, reflexiones o sentimientos que no nos atrevemos a decir de otra forma, por expresar esas partes de nuestra personalidad que creemos más vulnerables ante los ojos de los demás. La poesía no solo habla de amor, aunque ese es uno de sus grandes temas y en este libro no puede faltar, pero hay muchas cosas más, porque en verso también se puede reflexionar.


James Joyce

James Joyce

Author: Alfonso Zapico

Publisher: Arcade

Published: 2018-05-01

Total Pages: 240

ISBN-13: 9781628729085

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A dazzling, prize-winning graphic biography of one of the world's most revered writers. Winner of Spain's National Comic Prize and published to acclaim in Ireland, here is an extraordinary graphic biography of James Joyce that offers a fresh take on his tumultuous life. With evocative anecdotes and hundreds of ink-wash drawings, Alfonso Zapico invites the reader to share Joyce's journey, from his earliest days in Dublin to his life with his great love, Nora Barnacle, and their children, and his struggles and triumphs as an artist. Joyce experienced poverty, rejection, censorship, charges of blasphemy and obscenity, war, and crippling ill-health. A rebel and nonconformist in Dublin and a harsh critic of Irish society, he left Ireland in self-imposed exile with Nora, moving to Paris, Pola, Trieste, Rome, London, and finally Zurich. He overcame monumental challenges in creating and publishing Dubliners, Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man, Ulysses, and Finnegan's Wake. Along the way, he encountered a colorful cast of characters, from the Irish nationalists Charles Parnell and Michael Collins to literary greats Yeats, Proust, Hemingway, and Beckett, and the likes of Carl Jung and Vladimir Lenin.


Creationism and Its Critics in Antiquity

Creationism and Its Critics in Antiquity

Author: David Sedley

Publisher: Univ of California Press

Published: 2008-01-16

Total Pages: 300

ISBN-13: 9780520934368

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The world is configured in ways that seem systematically hospitable to life forms, especially the human race. Is this the outcome of divine planning or simply of the laws of physics? Ancient Greeks and Romans famously disagreed on whether the cosmos was the product of design or accident. In this book, David Sedley examines this question and illuminates new historical perspectives on the pantheon of thinkers who laid the foundations of Western philosophy and science. Versions of what we call the "creationist" option were widely favored by the major thinkers of classical antiquity, including Plato, whose ideas on the subject prepared the ground for Aristotle's celebrated teleology. But Aristotle aligned himself with the anti-creationist lobby, whose most militant members—the atomists—sought to show how a world just like ours would form inevitably by sheer accident, given only the infinity of space and matter. This stimulating study explores seven major thinkers and philosophical movements enmeshed in the debate: Anaxagoras, Empedocles, Socrates, Plato, the atomists, Aristotle, and the Stoics.


Genre Fusion

Genre Fusion

Author: Sara J. Brenneis

Publisher: Purdue University Press

Published: 2014

Total Pages: 252

ISBN-13: 1557536783

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" Genre Fusion demonstrates how Spanish authors accurately represent the lived experience of Spain's history and collective memory by overlapping the genres of fiction and historiography."


Open Budgets

Open Budgets

Author: Sanjeev Khagram

Publisher: Brookings Institution Press

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13: 0815723377

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Explicates political economy factors that have brought about greater transparency and participation in budget settings across Asia, Africa, and Latin America. This title presents the strategies, policies, and institutions through which improvements can occur and produce change in policy and institutional outcomes.


The Common Good in Late Medieval Political Thought

The Common Good in Late Medieval Political Thought

Author: M. S. Kempshall

Publisher: Oxford University Press on Demand

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 401

ISBN-13: 9780198207160

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This study offers a major reinterpretation of medieval political thought by examining one of its most fundamental ideas. If it was axiomatic that the goal of human society should be the common good, then this notion presented at least two conceptual alternatives. Did it embody the highest moral ideals of happiness and the life of virtue, or did it represent the more pragmatic benefits of peace and material security? Political thinkers from Thomas Aquinas to William of Ockham answered thisquestion in various contexts. In theoretical terms, they were reacting to the rediscovery of Aristotle's Politics and Ethics, an event often seen as pivotal in the history of political thought. On a practical level, they were faced with pressing concerns over the exercise of both temporal and ecclesiastical authority - resistance to royal taxation and opposition to the jurisdiction of the pope. In establishing the connections between these different contexts, The Common Good questions the identification of Aristotle as the primary catalyst for the emergence of 'the individual' and a 'secular' theory of the state. Through a detailed exposition of scholastic political theology, it argues that the roots of any such developments should be traced, instead, to Augustine and the Bible.