Beast or Angel?


Book Description

The world of things is different now from what it was half a century ago, but Rene Dubos doubts that there have been basic changes in life itself, in those attitudes and activities, needs, and yearning, that are the most important for happiness and suffering, for hope and despair the differences between humanity and animality. Sophisticated and civilized as we may be, we have retained from our distant ancestors the ability to derive profound satisfaction from the small happenings of daily life. Beast or Angel? attempts to trace the origins of needs and yearnings that have always been those of humankind everywhere and always. In this search, Dubos expresses the same concerns and uses the same words when speaking of the past, the present, or the future the reason being that the biological and psychological characteristics of humankind have remained essentially the same for at least fifty millennia. We are human to the extent that we live according to certain principles which have a human quality. This quality has emerged and continues to emerge from the choices that we make throughout our individual lives and that humankind has made from the beginning of its existence. To be human is to be able and willing to choose among the options that are offered to the human species by the natural order of things. This book examines human species, not only on the basis of the biological and psychological attributes it shares with animal species, but more by identifying its choices throughout pre-history and history.




Beast Or Angel?


Book Description

Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Foreword: Conveying French in English -- Introduction -- I / Stability and Adaptability of Humankind -- 1 / Old World and New World -- 2 / The Saga of the Human Species -- 3 / The Races of Man -- 4 / Biological Freudianism -- 5 / Social Adaptations -- II / Choosing to Be Human -- 1 / The Bestiality of the Human Species -- 2 / The Humanness of the Human Species -- 3 / Individualism and Collectivity -- 4 / Humanity and the Beast -- III / The Past in the Present -- 1 / The Cave and the Horizon -- 2 / Cities Old and New -- 3 / The Clan and the Stranger -- 4 / Life in the City -- 5 / Crowds and Machines -- 6 / Hauts Lieux and Monuments -- IV / At Home on Earth -- 1 / Yesterday's Future Shock -- 2 / The Camp and the Open Road -- 3 / Ulysses and the American Frontier -- 4 / Technologic Utopia -- 5 / The Incarnations of Humankind -- 6 / Revolutions and Resurrection -- V / On the Pleasures of Being Human -- 1 / The Diversity of Human Life -- 2 / Pluralism and World Order -- 3 / Adventure and Fantasy -- 4 / Joie de Vivre and Happiness -- Envoi -- Notes -- Index




THE JUMBLED LOVE


Book Description

The world doesn't seem to understand the meaning of true love except for the few who live, lived, and wanted to live in the world of true love. But then what is true love? Not caring about the questions of what is pestering the minds of young adults nowadays, Angelica Ross stood out differently. She even feel something like that...A typical girl with no idea of love. All she ever knew was her family, friends, and peace. But that was until she met him... The 'INHUMANE HUMAN', Beast for the world but for her? A man who knows everything, including her, and as the cherry on the top, he is the only one who truly knows her. While the whole world thinks her being a simple yet different girl, he knew that she is the disaster, HIS DISASTER, while the world calls him the 'disaster'. Funny, the world doesn't seem to know that whatever he is today is, for her, his ANGEL. After all, their story is not only about true love but much more...the secrets, the pain, the fear, and the last but not least, the evilness.




Neither Angel nor Beast


Book Description

Blaise Pascal began as a mathematical prodigy, developed into a physicist and inventor, and had become by the end of his life in 1662 a profound religious thinker. As a philosopher, he was most convinced by the long tradition of scepticism, and so refused – like Kierkegaard – to build a philosophical or theological system. Instead, he argued that the human heart required other forms of discourse to come to terms with the basic existential questions – our nature, purpose and relationship with God. This introduction to the life and philosophical thought of Pascal is intended for the general reader. Strikingly illustrated, it traces the antithetical tensions in Pascal’s life from his infancy, when he was said to have been placed under the spell of a sorceress, to his final years of extreme asceticism. Pascal stressed both the misery and greatness of humanity, our finitude and our comprehension of the infinite. The book shows how his life, philosophical thought and literary style can best be understood in the light of the paradoxical view of human nature. It covers the methods of argument and the central issues of the Provincial Letters and of the Pensées; the Introduction places Pascal’s thought in the religious and political climate of seventeenth-century France, and a ‘Chronology of the Life of Pascal’ is also included.




A SECRET HIDDEN BY THE BEAST 1


Book Description

 Building on different kinds of genres, the series Secrets & Confusion is a Trilogy of Love and Fantasy. Besides the rule of timeline, this series is written in the inverse direction of time. The first book in this Trilogy, A Secret Hidden by the Beast 1 set out the love between the male lead and the female lead in the mystery thriller genre with all-around questions and confusion. Despite the love, the brother-sister relationship and friendship play a major role in part 1. With the secrets revealed, the confusion increases, leading to the plot of part 2 in the Trilogy.




Angels and Beasts


Book Description

Angels and Beasts looks into the interplay between the angelic figures in the vision of the seven seals. John creates a relationship between the four living creatures and the four riders in Revelation 6:1-8 that must not be overlooked. This connection works between the two groups as a whole and at the one-to-one level. The blending of symbols and the communication between these symbolic figures reveal exegetical, theological, and spiritual lessons. Both the scenario and the script of John's vision talk about terms and ties in the realm of angelic beings. For John these relations in the world above are a code to unlock relations in the world below.




The Angel and the Beast


Book Description

They have arrived or have they been here a long long time? Who are they really? What do they really want? Are they here to save us or enslave us?




Beauty and the Beast


Book Description




If I Were Your Angel


Book Description

In our fast-paced world, it is easy to forget how much a simple "I love you" means to a child. This is why the author of this beautifully written and illustrated masterpiece put together this collection of creative and loving words.




Cognitive Gadgets


Book Description

“This is an important book and likely the most thoughtful of the year in the social sciences... Highly recommended, it is likely to prove one of the most thought-provoking books of the year.”—Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution How did human minds become so different from those of other animals? What accounts for our capacity to understand the way the physical world works, to think ourselves into the minds of others, to gossip, read, tell stories about the past, and imagine the future? These questions are not new: they have been debated by philosophers, psychologists, anthropologists, evolutionists, and neurobiologists over the course of centuries. One explanation widely accepted today is that humans have special cognitive instincts. Unlike other living animal species, we are born with complicated mechanisms for reasoning about causation, reading the minds of others, copying behaviors, and using language. Cecilia Heyes agrees that adult humans have impressive pieces of cognitive equipment. In her framing, however, these cognitive gadgets are not instincts programmed in the genes but are constructed in the course of childhood through social interaction. Cognitive gadgets are products of cultural evolution, rather than genetic evolution. At birth, the minds of human babies are only subtly different from the minds of newborn chimpanzees. We are friendlier, our attention is drawn to different things, and we have a capacity to learn and remember that outstrips the abilities of newborn chimpanzees. Yet when these subtle differences are exposed to culture-soaked human environments, they have enormous effects. They enable us to upload distinctively human ways of thinking from the social world around us. As Cognitive Gadgets makes clear, from birth our malleable human minds can learn through culture not only what to think but how to think it.