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ria9781138374393_inpPaperback / softback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; Belief is not knowledge but we tend to hold our beliefs as if they represent knowledge selecting whatever evidence is required to justify them. And because humans tend to cling to their beliefs as truths organizations often ignore th paperback
2011DADAX0190120428OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 2020-11-03. paperback. New. 8.60x0.30x6.10. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS paperback
44856654-nnew. unknown
35152907like new. unknown
SONG0810844400Scarecrow Press 0000-00-00. hardcover. Used: Good. 5.82x0.81x8.66. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Scarecrow Press hardcover
2015x-019967812XOxford Univ Pr 2015. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 1808 pages. 10.75x7.75x2.50 inches. Oxford Univ Pr hardcover
1520724Oxford University Press. New. Brand New. Oxford University Press unknown
2001Q-0425180689Berkley 2001-07-01. Mass Market Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Berkley paperback
Oxford-9780194770255Oxford University Press. Mix Med Online. New. 0 mm x 0 mm. Oxford University Press unknown
Oxford-9780194770255Oxford University Press. Mix Med Online. New. 0 mm x 0 mm. Oxford University Press unknown
Oxford-9780194770248Oxford University Press. Paperback. New. 276 mm x 219 mm. Oxford University Press paperback
29949625-nnew. unknown
2003Q-1589070070Taylor Trade Publishing 2003-06-23. Paperback. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Taylor Trade Publishing paperback
1006858024.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
2000__0195274709Oxford Univ Pr 2000. Leather Bound. New. indexed edition. 1632 pages. 9.00x6.25x1.50 inches. Oxford Univ Pr hardcover
Q-0195274598Oxford University Press. bonded_leather. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Oxford University Press hardcover
1962716113PN. New. 1962. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition. . PN paperback
0194596176.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
2000Q-0425175995Berkley 2000-07-01. Mass Market Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Berkley paperback
0197820751New. Brand new and still unused unknown
1909832M27Oxford: Alden & Co. 1909. Cloth. Very Good. 7" by 8.5". P. de Wint; E. Vaughan Jenkins; Hills & Saunders; et al. A very scarce souvenir programme for the Federation of Grocers' Associations 19th Annual Conference illustrated throughout. In the publisher's original half cloth binding. All edges gilt. This is a souvenir programme for the 19th annual conference of the Federation of Grocers' Associations held in Oxford between the 5th and 9th July 1909 by the Oxford and District Grocers' Association. The Grocers' Federation was started in 1891. At its 19th conference the Federation consisted of 130 Associations representing about 14000 shops. In this programme is a history of Oxford and of the Oxford and District Grocers' Association with the names and portraits of members of the various committees. There is also a summary of the events of the conference and a couple of accounts of excursions during the conference. In the publisher's original half cloth binding. Externally smart though a little soiled to the boards with minor wear to the extremities and joints. Spine is slightly slanted. Internally firmly bound. Pages are very bright and clean. Very Good Alden & Co. hardcover
2269011 March 1821. Oriel College Oxford. 1p 4to. In fair condition on aged and worn paper with one corner torn away without any loss of text. Folded three times. The recipient is not named. The letter begins: 'Sir Your letter enclosing a prospectus of your proposed work has just reached me. I beg you will excuse me for not entering into a discussion of the subject which is a rule I have found it necessary under my engagements to make. I have however enclosed a bill which exceeds the whole price of the publication last eight words underlined but I do not desire the numbers to be sent last nine words underlined untill sic called for nor would I consent upon any account to have my name appear in any list of subscribers.' He concludes: 'All family connection which you seem to think probable from the identity of name is quite unknown to me.' 11 March 1821. Oriel College [Oxford]. unknown
1912001465Paisley Scotland: Alexander Gardner 1912. Book. See Description. See Description. First Edition. 10" x 7 1/4". 446 pages frontispiece and some 23 black and white plates some double page. Extensive appendices. Hb in original cloth binding top edges gilt; binding a little faded and marked upper board shelf-worn on part on lower edge a few inconspicuous holes at the edges of the spine internally very good. Alexander Gardner Hardcover
25041One dated 'University College Oxford / Innocents Day 28 December 1866'. Another on letterhead of Christ Church Oxford 'Whitsun Monday'. The last without date or place. Excellent affectionate and eloquent content including a moving expression of the conventional Victorian view of Christmas. See Bright's entry in the Oxford DNB. A total of eight pages six of which are closely written. Items One and Two addressed to ‘My dear Jacob’. Item Three is incomplete. ONE: ‘Univ Coll / Innocents Day 1866.’ 5pp 12mo. On bifolium. Bright’s signature ‘W. Bright’ and the conclusion of the letter i.e. the fifth page are written crosswise at the head of the first page. He begins by stating that Jacob’s letter ‘was a very good companion to one which I received from Newbolt’. He spent ‘a very happy Christmas’ at ‘SS Phil. James and Merton’. The following passage gives an indication of the letter’s quality: ‘It was striking to enter the former church at 7.30 when I went to take the first of the three celebrations and contrast the dim soft twilight outside with the splendour of the sanctuary lit up by sixteen candles and with the altar in its radiant Christmas garb. You remember how Liddon accounts for the use of the highly dogmatic and gospel rather than of any more historic or narrative selections; - Christmas is the day on which owing to the immeasurable condescenscion and the circumstances of infancy and poverty which surround it the Church owes and in fact cannot refrain from rendering a special recognition of the Divinity of the Virginborn. I never felt that so much as when I had to repeat the closing words of that interdiction to S. John’s gospel at that time and place.’ He praises ‘the best skill of the 16th century’ remarking that ‘the most accurate statements of doctrinal truth are precisely the forms most full to Christian minds of devotional power’ adding ‘I am always sorry when good men like Archd. Churton & Sir R. Palmer fail to see the immense advantage of exact orthodoxy in hymns or prayers’. In another paragraph discussing Christmas he writes: ‘I do not htink that its joy is as triumphant as the “Paschale gaudium†but it has in it a character of peculiar & exquisite sweetness: the secret of which I take to be that it unites all the tender and pathetic associations of infancy and motherhood and of a birthday with the intense convictions that express themselves in the worship of Our Lord see the Adeste Fideles. How deeply one pities this week that poor unhappy apostate at Pietermaritz.’ The reference is to Bishop Colenso. He describes the service at Merton in great detail before expressing great sympathy with Jacob’s ‘difficulties as to Church restoration in a rural parish. What is the right way I wonder of restoring’. He ends with affectionate words about their friendship. TWO: ‘Whitsun Monday’. 2pp 12mo. The commencement of the letter only. He had received the news of Jacob’s ‘new prospects’: ‘Witney will grieve - but you could not have declined such a call.’ He will keep a look out for a curate but is ‘greatly pressed by various occupations’. Signed ‘W Bright.’ THREE: Conclusion of letter only hence no date or place. 2pp 12mo. On single leaf. Signed ‘W Bright.’ Cuts in: ‘. secret of Edward King’s influence as Principal. One sees better what he is by observing his intense pastoral love as it comes out in his dealings with his parish boys and young men.’ Later he writes: ‘I thought S. Augustine’s phrase Ama et fac quod vis might be the motto of his ministry: and when he reclined under a tent for two or three hours watching a cricket match with a playful word for each boy or man who came back from his innings I knew that all this was part of his work.’ He continues with reference to ‘Charles Martin and Talbot’ Cuddesden Alfred Pott. ‘Hall has seen Bp Gray who told him that if Mr Butler went out to Nolet he would be received by the great majority of clergy and communicants: but that the fury of the heretical and irreligious body would make his life almost a life of martyrdom.’ He continues: ‘I had what I esteem the honour the day before yesterday of a letter from Miss Yonge. the author Charlotte Yonge I always think she is one of the best teachers last word underlined I ever had.’ One dated 'Univ[ersity] Coll[ege, Oxford] / Innocents Day [28 December] 1866'. Another, on letterhead of Christ Church, Oxford, unknown