Mining for Meaning

Mining for Meaning
Author: James Bailiff
Publisher: Page Publishing Inc
Total Pages: 136
Release: 2013-05
Genre: Bibles
ISBN: 0985450495

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Illuminating the true principals and guidelines bestowed upon us by the Creator, Mining for Meaning: Harvesting Rich Veins of Meaning from Our Relationship with God, One Another, and Nature explores the intrinsic value of human beings to one another and the world they inhabit. James Bailiff examines the potential to be fully engaged in our relationship with God and nature. By acknowledging the sometimes antiquated notions of religiosity, Bailiff proposes a new sense of meaning; one that is our birthright, regardless of what faith we choose. Transcending our ego-based consciousness to attain personal happiness is a truly fulfilling experience, one attained in union with God. Bailiff offers profound insights that allow us to embrace the joyous emotions that gratitude, harmony, abundance, and love provide for us. More timely than ever before, Mining for Meaning questions our departure from experiencing nature in its fundamental form and its relevance as a reflection of the Creator, as well as the negative byproducts that come as a result of detachment from that natural world. Inspiring, enlightening and uplifting, this is a must-read spiritual manifesto for a better way of life and a better world around us.

Mining, Metallurgy, and the Meaning of Life

Mining, Metallurgy, and the Meaning of Life
Author: Roger Sworder
Publisher: Sophia Perennis et Universalis
Total Pages: 169
Release: 2008-05
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 9781597310857

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Of all the crafts and professions other than the priesthood, none has been more closely connected with the religious taditions of Western peoples than mining and metallurgy. Not so long ago our ancestors would have found it incredible that people could not see the connections between mining, metallurgy, and the sacred, just as we now find it incredible that they could. What was a commonplace to the European mind for millennia has for us become a matter of the deepest obscurity. This is a matter of more than historical interest. It goes to the heart of how we think about work, about religion, and about the relations between people and nature. For our ancestors most forms of work were spiritual paths, disciplines that shaped those who engaged in them as powerfully as the ritual of church or temple. In many crafts and professions the stages by which the learner was inducted were initiations into substantial undestandings of the spirit and of spiritual practice. The early chapters of this book consider how the smith god of the Greeks and Romans made the world in his forge, how Moses made the tabernacle as God commanded, and how mining was sanctified in the Middle Ages. Traditionally, these forms of work were thought to repeat and extend the creative powers of God and nature, and those who engaged in them enjoying a special insight into the processes of the divine creaion. The withdrawal of the sacred sense from human work has diminished religion in many Western societies, and the several stages by which this withdrawal occurred is one of the major concerns of this book. This same withdrawal has also diminished our sense of the relations between the human and natural worlds. In earlier times people felt that working with the natural world helped it to bring to birth the many goods with which it was in labor. Work fulfilled not only the worker but nature itself. Even in quite recent times the spirits of the earth, the fairies and dwarfts, actively assisted farmers and miners in their work according to common belief, and the fifth chapter considers some of the stories about these elemental denizens of the mine. The final chapter examines how the belief in such creatures came to be lost and the consequences of that loss for our understanding of the natural world. This book is a book of stories from many different places and times in the history of the West, and the juxtaposition of these stories in a coherent sequence reveals a way of looking at work, nature, and religon that was much more substantial than is our own.

Mining the Meaning

Mining the Meaning
Author: Katy Shaw
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2012-03-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1443838608

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This innovative study provides an exciting, challenging and accessible critical introduction to cultural representations of 1984–5 and analyses the ways in which these representations articulate an essential dialogic exchange of issues central to both the coal dispute and the development of literary and cultural studies over the past twenty five years. Focusing closely on the politics of form, the study interrogates the significance of the mode, means and function of strikers’ writings, as well as alternative representations of the conflict offered by established writers, musicians, artists and film-makers in the wake of the coal dispute. These representations are worthy of study due to the critical interventions they offer, their evidence of the cultural pressures and forces of not only the strike period, but the post-strike years of industrial and labour change and their remarkable contribution to existing social, political and literary histories. Engaging with these works, many of which have never been subject to previous academic analysis, the study enables twenty-first-century readers to re-conceptualise paradigms of received wisdom concerning 1984–5. The significance of the competing representations offered by these very different cultural modes as they engage in a wider battle to ‘author’ the conflict is central to this study. Through a detailed analysis of these representations, as well as the socio-cultural contexts of their production and dissemination, this book explores a range of attempts to capture the sensibilities of late twentieth century society and contributes to an ongoing debate regarding cultural representations of this period in British history. Influenced by critical theory, the text is the first secondary resource concerning cultural representations of the 1984–5 UK miners’ strike available to the reading public the world over.

Mining the Meaning of the Bible

Mining the Meaning of the Bible
Author: Sallie Latkovich
Publisher: Liguori Publications
Total Pages: 63
Release: 2011
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780764819827

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A simple guide for middle-grade students to get the meaning and message of the scriptures, this edtion uses graphical representations to aid in learning in ways that appeal to this age group.

Mining for Meaning

Mining for Meaning
Author: Suzanne Choo
Publisher:
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2013
Genre: Literature
ISBN: 9789814151115

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Mining Morality

Mining Morality
Author: William P. George
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 323
Release: 2019-10-11
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1978707932

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Employing “self-sharpening tools” found in the work of theologian and philosopher Bernard Lonergan, Pope Francis’ encyclical Laudato si’, and international law, William P. George brings mining to personal and collective moral awareness by “prospecting for ethics” at selected sites: (1) Butte, Montana, “the Richest Hill on Earth,” once bound to Chuquicamata, Chile, by a company that spanned two continents and nearly owned a state; (2) the tiny island nation of Nauru, called Pleasant Island until it was devastated by phosphate mining and the breaking of a sacred trust by foreign powers; (3) the deep seabed, governed by the United Nations Law of the Sea, a “constitution for the oceans” that regards much of the resource-rich seabed as humankind’s “common heritage”; (4) Africa, with its uranium mines but also its conflicts over what “being nuclear” means in the wake of colonialism, apartheid, and Hiroshima; and (5) mineral-rich asteroids speeding through space where mining rights are contested, even as space entrepreneurs look to become the world’s first trillionaires. George introduces readers to remarkable moral miners––the women of Butte and Chuquicamata, a World Court judge from Sri Lanka, and the Rocket Boys of Coalwood, West Virginia, to name a few––and leads them to consider not only the morality of mining––what’s good and not so good about resource extraction––but also the mining of morality, a venture that Socrates called “the examined life.”

Mining for Meaning

Mining for Meaning
Author: James D Bailiff
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2024-03-28
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 9781961507319

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Mining for Meaning addresses our culture's struggle to find life's meaning and purpose and provides insights into how such meaning and purpose may be found in our primary relationships, namely, with God, One Another, and Nature. Like rich veins of gold, of these relationships i filled with precious insights and inspiration for living a meaningful life. However, these veins require intentional effort to extract their value. The author identifies helpful "tools" with which to do the work and describes how these can be applied to the task. Readers of Mining for Meaning will learn how others have found meaning and purpose and will be inspired to exercise the disciplines for themselves. Dr. Bailiff believes that life is designed to be meaningful and hopes that this book may prove to be a helpful resource for every reader.

Mining of Massive Datasets

Mining of Massive Datasets
Author: Jure Leskovec
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 480
Release: 2014-11-13
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 1107077230

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Now in its second edition, this book focuses on practical algorithms for mining data from even the largest datasets.

Natural Language Processing and Text Mining

Natural Language Processing and Text Mining
Author: Anne Kao
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2007-03-06
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 1846287545

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Natural Language Processing and Text Mining not only discusses applications of Natural Language Processing techniques to certain Text Mining tasks, but also the converse, the use of Text Mining to assist NLP. It assembles a diverse views from internationally recognized researchers and emphasizes caveats in the attempt to apply Natural Language Processing to text mining. This state-of-the-art survey is a must-have for advanced students, professionals, and researchers.