Tag: Degrees

180 Degrees Unlearn The Lies You’ve Been Taught To Believe


Free Download 180 Degrees: Unlearn The Lies You’ve Been Taught To Believe by Feargus O’Connor Greenwood
English | December 30, 2020 | ISBN: 1915236002 | PDF | 769 pages | 24.8 MB
Stop for a moment and take a look at the world around you. Does everything seem normal? Or is it all upside down? Do you think this is happening just by chance? And if it isn’t, wouldn’t you like to know what is really going on?

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Degrees of Deception America’s For-Profit Higher Education Fraud


Free Download Kevin W. Connell, "Degrees of Deception: America’s For-Profit Higher Education Fraud"
English | ISBN: 1475826052 | 2016 | 172 pages | EPUB | 2 MB
Degrees of Deception explains the development and widespread abuses of the for-profit higher education sector in America. To illustrate the scope and degree of wrongdoing in for-profit higher education, readers are exposed to the industry in the same sequential order that students experience it in reality. A few examples include predatory recruitment, targeting military service members, questionable quality of programs, predatory lending, high withdrawal and default rates, manipulation of job placement data, and strategic lobbying efforts to block comprehensive reform. Following this analysis, Degrees of Deception offers bold and unprecedented solutions to tackle the crisis in a way that protects millions of student victims and taxpayers indefinitely.

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Degrees of givenness on saturation in Jean-Luc Marion


Free Download Degrees of givenness : on saturation in Jean-Luc Marion By Gschwandtner, Christina M.; Marion, Jean-Luc
2014 | 279 Pages | ISBN: 0253014190 | EPUB | 2 MB
The philosophical work of Jean-Luc Marion has opened new ways of speaking about religious convictions and experiences. In this exploration of Marion’s philosophy and theology, Christina M. Gschwandtner presents a comprehensive and critical analysis of the ideas of saturated phenomena and the phenomenology of givenness. She claims that these phenomena do not always appear in the excessive mode that Marion describes and suggests instead that we consider degrees of saturation. Gschwandtner covers major themes in Marion’s work―the historical event, art, nature, love, gift and sacrifice, prayer, and the Eucharist. She works within the phenomenology of givenness, but suggests that Marion himself has not considered important aspects of his philosophy.

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