The Sight of Hell" was written "for children and young persons" by the Rev. John Furniss in 1861, however this reprint is from an 1874 publication. The images of Hell have all been added. This edition also includes text from late nineteenth-century reviews of the book.
·A motivational true story about a man who finds true happiness after struggling with depression, drug addiction and financial despair despite being blind after a failed suicide attempt. ·John and his wife Anni, fondly called "Honeybee" by John, share their story with the mission to inspire others to pursue their own creative passions, regardless of the challenges they may face. ·Estimated 192+ pages, available in paperback and audio, also exploring braille edition. ·Although John's creative outlet revolves around woodworking, overall mission and positioning of the title is very much anchored in self-help/inspirational segments.
John O'Loughlin's aphoristic philosophy e-book brings his element-based comprehensive exactitude to bear on morality, not just on one kind but on all the different kinds of morality, and shows that morality only exists because it is hegemonic over a correlative unmorality corresponding, in whatever class/element position, to the subordinate gender, but that such a hegemony dare not risk an immoral backlash from below on account of its own amoral failings - something which the author goes into in some detail with the help of analogous contexts and examples, whether sartorial, social, literary, or whatever. But John O'Loughlin, whilst he may be comprehensively exacting in his outlining of the different kinds of morality, is not impartial. On the contrary, he makes a case for only one type of morality (and its corresponding unmorality) - a case that, in his view, would result, if politically and religiously implemented, in the best of all possible worlds - the goal towards which his entire philosophy points.
ÿJohn Furniss and his friends took every opportunity to escape from their work and studies and go climbing together, first in England, Wales and Scotland and later tackling the more challenging peaks of the Austrian and German Alps. Adding the vertical metres together, they scaled more than 13 times the height of Mount Everest.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.