The Man Who Has Had No Chance


Book Description

Napoleon Hill admired others who had overcome adversity. Edward Bok, publisher of the acclaimed Ladies’ Home Journal, was one of the men whose life Hill examined because he overcame adversity to ultimately succeed. Bok wrote to Hill, and that letter formed the basis of one of Hill’s lectures for his students at George Washington Institute. The Edward Bok story is an example of how Hill used others’ experiences to learn from defeat and overcome hardships in life. The story and lessons that Hill gleaned from it are packaged and presented for you in The Man Who Has Had No Chance.




Our Boys


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Impossible Odds


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An account of the aid worker co-author's dramatic January 2012 rescue from kidnappers in Somalia by members of a Navy SEAL Team Six unit offers insight into the effective use of targeted U.S. military missions.




What About Those Who Have Never Heard?


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Ronald H. Nash, Gabriel Fackre and John Sanders offer three evangelical views on the destiny of the unevangelized.




Evidence in Blue


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The Athenaeum


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Harming Future Persons


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Melinda A. Roberts and David T. Wasserman 1 Purpose of this Collection What are our obligations with respect to persons who have not yet, and may not ever, come into existence? Few of us believe that we can wrong those whom we leave out of existence altogether—that is, merely possible persons. We may think as well that the directive to be “fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth” 1 does not hold up to close scrutiny. How can it be wrong to decline to bring ever more people into existence? At the same time, we think we are clearly ob- gated to treat future persons—persons who don’t yet but will exist—in accordance with certain stringent standards. Bringing a person into an existence that is truly awful—not worth having—can be wrong, and so can bringing a person into an existence that is worth having when we had the alternative of bringing that same person into an existence that is substantially better. We may think as well that our obligations with respect to future persons are triggered well before the point at which those persons commence their existence. We think it would be wrong, for example, to choose today to turn the Earth of the future into a miserable place even if the victims of that choice do not yet exist.




The Conservative


Book Description

A journal devoted to the discussion of political, economic, and sociological questions.