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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Adam Dailey

Adam Ferguson's Later Writings

Adam Ferguson's Later Writings

EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY PRESS
2023
sidottu
A critically introduced and edited collection of new letters and an essay by the philosopher Adam Ferguson Includes 36 new letters and one essay published for the first time and contextualised within Ferguson's oeuvre Helps to fill in large gaps in Ferguson's biography Presents new angles on major areas of study including the East India Company, the Regency Crisis, Scottish reactions to the French Revolution, and contemporary perceptions of Adam Smith's Political Economy, among others Reveals the political influence that the Moderates of the Scottish Enlightenment, such as Ferguson, Hugh Blair (1718-1800), and Alexander Carlyle (1722-1805), attempted to exert on British foreign policy in the late 1790s This volume will publish for the first time thirty-six, until now, unpublished letters, as well as a new essay on the French Revolution, by the moral philosopher, historian and man-of-letters Adam Ferguson (1723-1816). A major figure in the Scottish Enlightenment, Ferguson has been one of the principal beneficiaries of the refocus of scholarly attention beyond the towering figures of David Hume (1711-1776) and Adam Smith (1723-1790) and toward their larger intellectual network. Penned during the last decades of his life, they were all addressed to his close friend Sir John Macpherson. They concern major topics of the day such as Enlightenment, Empire, and the French Revolution, as well as various illuminating details about Ferguson's final decades. They add considerably to our knowledge of the late Scottish Enlightenment. Located in a recent acquisition at the British Library, these previously unnoticed letters add considerably to our knowledge of Ferguson, his ideas - philosophical, historical, and political - and his intellectual milieu from 1784 to 1815. A substantial introductory essay presents the main findings, while critical apparatus will assist specialists and students alike in understanding this key Enlightenment thinker.
Adam Ferguson's Later Writings

Adam Ferguson's Later Writings

EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY PRESS
2025
nidottu
This volume will publish for the first time thirty-six, until now, unpublished letters, as well as a new essay on the French Revolution, by the moral philosopher, historian and man-of-letters Adam Ferguson (1723-1816). A major figure in the Scottish Enlightenment, Ferguson has been one of the principal beneficiaries of the refocus of scholarly attention beyond the towering figures of David Hume (1711-1776) and Adam Smith (1723-1790) and toward their larger intellectual network. Penned during the last decades of his life, these letters were all addressed to his close friend Sir John Macpherson. They concern major topics of the day such as Enlightenment, Empire, and the French Revolution, as well as various illuminating details about Ferguson's final decades. They add considerably to our knowledge of the late Scottish Enlightenment.Located in a recent acquisition at the British Library, these previously unnoticed letters add considerably to our knowledge of Ferguson, his ideas - philosophical, historical, and political - and his intellectual milieu from 1784 to 1815. A substantial introductory essay presents the main findings, while critical apparatus will assist specialists and students alike in understanding this key Enlightenment thinker.
Adam's Gluten Free Surprise

Adam's Gluten Free Surprise

Debbie Simpson

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2012
pokkari
One of the best ways to help a child who needs to be gluten free is to help the important adults in his/her life understand what this means. For someone who doesn't need to follow a strict gluten-free diet, it can be difficult to understand. After all, the word "diet" usually means "cheat a little." For a person with celiac (or nonceliac gluten sensitivity) 100% adherence is very important. Yes, a crumb can make a difference. This "children's" book is helping teachers, grandparents, childcare providers, and others understand what gluten is. It is helping them understand the importance of food safety while including all children. Adam's Gluten Free Surprise: Helping Others Understand Gluten Free follows Adam through his first six months of a new school year after being diagnosed with celiac disease. He is very accepting of his medically required diet, offering a, "that's OK," when he cannot be included in a special treat with his peers. Adam's attitude, as well as his ability to speak up for his needs, offers other children a positive role model. But he also shows others the sad feelings that can arise, and that are so natural when a person feels left out or when they cannot eat something that looks and smells good. In the end, Adam's teacher and peers understand a bit more about gluten. They secretly plan to make their Valentine's Day party completely gluten free so he can be included. While this certainly won't happen in every classroom, the purpose of this story is to help promote empathy and understanding. Adam's Gluten Free Surprise is about the acceptance that is required by the child with a special diet and it is about the understanding that is required by those who are important parts of his or her life. *Teachers: if one of your students requires a gluten-free diet, please ask him or her first before reading this book to the entire class. While some children are thrilled to share a book that is about themselves, some children don't want to be the focus. But please do read it for yourself. Your understanding of gluten free is very important. (Identical girls' version: Hailey's Gluten Free Surprise)
Adam Bede

Adam Bede

George Eliot

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2012
nidottu
A tale of rural tragedy and redemption, George Eliot's first novel. It may seem like an old tale: the beautiful village girl, her faithful admirer, a country squire's seduction. But seen through the eyes of any of its players, the old tale becomes one of fresh heartbreak, innocent hopes, best intentions gone awry, and better selves lost and restored. George Eliot's first novel shows all her humane intelligence and intimate knowledge of the richness and complexity of ordinary life.
Adam's Wisdom and Israel's Law

Adam's Wisdom and Israel's Law

Rony Kozman

Baylor University Press
2025
sidottu
The concept of natural law—universal moral knowledge—is often associated with Stoic philosophers, Thomas Aquinas, or the medieval Jewish rabbis. But Jews in the Second Temple period had their own model of natural, interpreting the story of Adam and Eve so as to associate the primordial pair with "wisdom," "law," or "commandment." In this tradition, when God created humans he endowed them with moral knowledge. "Adam's wisdom" was a common motif in Jewish literature of the Greco-Roman period. Some texts—namely, Sirach, 4 Ezra, and Paul's Letter to the Romans—combined Adam's law with the tradition of Israel's reception of the law at Sinai. Rony Kozman offers a careful reading of these three early Jewish writings to show that Jews coordinated Adam's wisdom and the torah of Moses to emphasize that natural law was divinely revealed. This interpretive tactic heightened the moral knowledge God gave to all people by dressing Adam's commandment in the cloak of Sinai's thunderous revelation; it further underscored humanity's culpability alongside God's justice. But Jewish writers thought differently about the possibility of fulfilling natural law's obligations, and deployments of the motif toward particular rhetorical-theological ends resulted in divergent perspectives: Sirach secures humanity's moral agency; 4 Ezra diminishes it; Romans incapacitates it altogether. Kozman reads key passages from Romans to show Paul's universal problem with law and his solution. The arrival of law's global dominion in Adam and Moses subjected everyone to the reigns of Sin and Death. Paul's gospel announces that in Christ, Jews and gentiles have been liberated from Law's reign so that they fulfill its just commands. Adam's Wisdom and Israel's Law remedies the scholarly neglect of natural law in the New Testament, recontextualizes the Apostle Paul within his Jewish milieu, and emphasizes the importance of attending to both the common and diverse interpretations of the figure of Adam in the Second Temple period. As Kozman demonstrates, Adam was an important site for contesting theological and philosophical issues, including epistemology, ethical obligation, divine justice, human freedom, and how Jews and gentiles relate to God's law.