Politeia Dr Remo Susanna JrInnovative readings and creative reinterpretations of significant works in the field of ancient philosophy. In classical Greece, the word politeia in its largest sense meant the citizens' engagement with the shared project that is the lived life of their polis, city, civic society. Ancient philosophers, poets, historians, and orators constantly reflected on what this shared project should be and how citizens could participate in it. The chapters in
" This book explains how and when this law of high moral standing collapsed over the course of the centuries
Akhenaten: A Historian’s View examines what scholars have said over the years regarding key aspects of Akhenaten and his times (‘the Amarna Period’)
Psalters and secular works
Art historical and literary perspectives on the place of women in the medieval church
From post-war debates on institutionalised cooperation in Western Europe to the ambitions of the European Union in the post-Cold War era
and are still affecting
rational and speaking human subject and argues that the irrationality of animal worlds marks the very limits of human thinking
The book shows that some kinds of flexible generic frameworks or emergent common metaphors can be employed to sustain group dynamism in design through a project's lifetime
New poems by the author of Winter Crows
the sacred island of Kuan-yin
Demonstrates that Rabbi Shneur Zalman's teachings regarding time and history enabled Habad's growth into a mass Jewish movement
The "group model" of Japanese society that has been in fashion in the West confuses the goals of an organization with the personal aims and aspirations of its members