656 resultados para Divine goodnes


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Intentaremos desentrañar uno de los aspectos centrales del De divina omnipotentia de Pedro Damián: la relación entre omnipotencia divina y principio de no contradicción. Para ello, refutaremos una de las hipótesis de lectura más tradicionales que se han hecho del tema, según la cual Pedro Damián considera que la omnipotencia divina es incompatible con el principio de no contradicción, y por tanto éste pierde toda vigencia. Por nuestra parte, afirmaremos que Pedro Damián nunca cuestionó seriamente la validez de la lógica, sino que procuró afianzarla sobre premisas de raigambre ético-metafísica. Para iluminar el sentido de nuestra interpretación, debemos contextualizar la discusión y explicar diversos conceptos del pensamiento damianeano (i.e. voluntas Dei, omnipotentia divina, aeternitas y bondad divina).

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O texto pretende localizar os ritmos do comércio de Bengala durante as oito hegemonias sucessivas que dominaram a Ásia meridional e a Ásia do Sudeste entre 2000 BC e 1750 AD. Estas foram: 1) A transição inicial de tribalismo para Estados sob a orientação do Bramanismo; 2) Budismo; 3) Revivalismo brâmane (purânico) nos séculos IX e X; 4) A revolução comercial no Golfo de Bengala no século XI; 5) A ordem mongol; 6) A primeira rede islâmica; 7) O sistema-mundo europeu do tipo português; 8) O sistema de Estados no século XVI – um segundo sistema-mundo islâmico. O texto sugere que Bengala manifestou fortes potencialidades comerciais nas fases 2,4 e 6. Esta força ficou reduzida no século XVI devido a uma combinação de factores: As ligações com o ocidente desde o período de Husain Shahi e continuadas nos tempos dos Mongóis, as ligações riverinas oesteleste dos séculos XVI –XVIII, o declínio do comércio oriental, a retirada chinesa, a queda do Aração e o declínio do comércio português no Golfo de Bengala.

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Comprend : La Nativité : [drame historique en 3 tableaux] - La Purification : [drame historique en 1 acte] - La fuite en Égypte : [drame historique en 3 tableaux]

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[Purāṇa. Bhāgavata-Purāṇa (français). 1788]

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The story Numbers of 25 which reports the incident of Baal Peor is one among several texts in the book of Numbers focusing on divine wrath, its cause and its consequences. The present article offers a detailed analysis of the account which is difficult to understand because of certain jumps in the plot and because of its allusive style. Scholars mostly agree with the idea that the story grew in two or three stages. A lot of commentators believe that the original story contains only the apostasy of Peor caused by the Moabites (vv. 1-5). A subsequent story would focus on Pinchas' action against Zimri and Kospi, and a third layer is linked to the story of the war between Israel and Midian (Numbers 31). The problem of this theory however is that it seems impossible to reconstruct an original story about the matter of Peor; one does not find a satisfying end within vv. 1-5. Furthermore, v. 5, which belongs to the first, "Moabite", section, is already linked to the theme of Midian which dominates the second and the third passage. Moreover, the assemblage of different themes and motifs seem having been done with care: Regarding the two abuses of Israel reported in the story--idolatry and intermarriage--, they often go together in late polemical Deuteronomistic and post-Deuteronomistic layers (Ezra-Nehemiah). The double focus on Midian and Moab could both be polemically directed against certain Moses traditions found in the books of Exodus and Deuteronomy (concerning Moses' marriage with a Midianite women on the one hand and his stay and death and burial in Moab - in the vicinity of Beth Peor - on the other hand). As in several ANE traditions also in the Hebrew Bible the motif of "divine wrath" serves to interpret fatal historical events; in Num 25 as in other Biblical stories however it is doubtful whether the alleged incident (the plague) really have taken place and the story's plot is anchored in ancient Israel's history.