natural theology

This site is part of the The natural religion project
dedicated to developing and promoting the art of peace.

Contact us: Click to email

Notes

[Sunday 20 February 2011 - Saturday 26 February 2011]

[Notebook: DB 70 Mathematical Theology]

Sunday 20 February 2011

[page 141]

Monday 21 February 2011

A divine world has taken me away from this book, but it is slowly shaping itself as an endless roll of articles, starting with some technical foundations and gradually moving toward commentary on day to day events. This means ??? the current order and tying things back to the history. A random walk through a theory. We are inside the theory and the theory is inside us, the theory in us to be a reflection of the theory outside us.

. . .

Wednesday 23 February 2011
Thursday 24 February 2011
Friday 25 February 2011
Saturday 26 February 2011

Related sites

Concordat Watch

Revealing Vatican attempts to propagate its religion by international treaty


Copyright:

You may copy this material freely provided only that you quote fairly and provide a link (or reference) to your source.


Further reading

Books

Click on the "Amazon" link below each book entry to see details of a book (and possibly buy it!)

Deighton, Len, Goodbye Mickey Mouse, Knopf 1982 Editorial review: 'It is a novel of memory, satisfying on every imaginable level, but truly astonishing In Its recreation of a time and place through minute detail. Deighton has written well of the air before, nonfictionally, and he informs us in an afterword that it took six years of research to do this novel. It shows. The only way you could know more about flying a P-51 Mustang, after reading this book, is to have flown one' - Washington Post 
Amazon
  back
McGregor, Richard, The Party: The Secret World of China's Communist Rulers, Amazon Editorial Review from Publishers Weekly: 'McGregor, a journalist at the Financial Times, begins his revelatory and scrupulously reported book with a provocative comparison between China™s Communist Party and the Vatican for their shared cultures of secrecy, pervasive influence, and impenetrability. The author pulls back the curtain on the Party to consider its influence over the industrial economy, military, and local governments. McGregor describes a system operating on a Leninist blueprint and deeply at odds with Western standards of management and transparency. Corruption and the tension between decentralization and national control are recurring themes--and are highlighted in the Party™s handling of the disturbing Sanlu case, in which thousands of babies were poisoned by contaminated milk powder. McGregor makes a clear and convincing case that the 1989 backlash against the Party, inexorable globalization, and technological innovations in communication have made it incumbent on the Party to evolve, and this smart, authoritative book provides valuable insight into how it has--and has not--met the challenge.' Copyright © Reed Business Informationback

www.naturaltheology.net is maintained by The Theology Company Proprietary Limited ACN 097 887 075 ABN 74 097 887 075 Copyright 2000-2020 © Jeffrey Nicholls