108,986 research outputs found

    Reading Joshua as Christian scripture

    No full text
    The perception of historical and ethical difficulties associated with Joshua in the twentieth century have led to difficulties in appropriating it as Christian Scripture. I argue that from the perspective of cultural memory Joshua nonetheless has an important role as Scripture, but, moreover, that in engagement with patristic interpretation such difficulties call for Joshua to be read in a different way from that in which it has been since at least the time of Calvin onwards. I develop a way of reading based on recent anthropological approaches to myth, such as those of Victor Turner and Seth Kunin in particular. I combine this treatment of myth with Paul Ricoeur's approach to narrative hermeneutics and the hermeneutics of testimony to produce a reading of Joshua in dialogue with its reception and use in order to argue for a constructive contemporary means of reading Joshua as Christian Scriptur

    Letter (copy): Joshua F. Speed to Abraham Lincoln May 17, 1863

    No full text
    Typed document- letter to Lincoln May 17, 186

    Joshua F. Moore, a schooner captain, describes various methods to avoid seasickn

    No full text
    Joshua F. Moore, a schooner captain, describes various methods to avoid seasickness. Because most Maine sightseeing and ferry trips operate within protected bays and harbors, the vast majority of passengers on Maine boat rides never get seasick

    Craven, F J (Francis Joshua), NX55186

    No full text
    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/379465Surname: CRAVEN Given Name(s) or Initials: F J (FRANCIS JOSHUA) Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX55186 Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 51870193277 Item: [2016.0049.11758] "Craven, F J (Francis Joshua), NX55186

    Joshua tree P.4

    No full text
    Joshua forest, south east of St. George within the Utah boundaries. Arthur F. Bruhn, donor & photog

    Joshua F. Speed and His Wife

    No full text
    A reproduction of a portrait of Joshua F. Speed and his wife, Fanny Henning (1820-1902). The print is accompanied by protective paper with caption.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/fvw-prints/1885/thumbnail.jp

    Dement, James F. interview

    No full text
    Oral History interview of Frank Dement. Interview conducted by Dull, Joshua at Veteran\u27s Residence

    Joshua Sackett's Ph.D. Dissertation Appendices S3.1, S4.1, and S5.1.

    No full text
    This dataset contains all unpublished appendices described in Joshua Sackett's Ph.D. dissertation (Appendices S3.1, S4.1, and S5.1). For a full description and analysis of these data, please consult Joshua Sackett's Ph.D. dissertation entitled 'Prokaryotic Diversity and Aqueous Geochemistry of Subsurface Environments of the Death Valley Regional Flow System,' publicly available via ProQuest and/or Digital Scholarship @UNLV. File contents are as follows: Appendix S3.1. Sheet 1: Unrarefied OTU table including OTU numbers, taxonomy, and OTU counts. BLAST-assigned taxonomy was derived from the SILVA 128 reference database at 99% sequence identity (k = kingdom, p = phylum, c = class, o = order, f = family, g = genus, s = species). Sheet 2: Abundances of phyla detected in each sample. The Proteobacteria have been subdivided into classes. Appendix S4.1. Sheet 1. Average amino acid identity (%) matrix for shared proteins between all Kiritimatiellae genomes in GTDB and the four Kiritimatiellae single amplified genomes (SAGs) sequenced from BLM1. Sheet 2. Peptidase genes identified in SAG AH-151-K23. Sheet 3. Peptidase genes identified in SAG AH-147-K21. Sheet 4. Peptidase genes identified in SAG AH-151-C14. Sheet 5. Peptidase genes identified in SAG AH-151-A22. Sheet 6. RAST/IMG protein-encoding gene identification cross-reference for protein-encoding genes identified in AH-151-K23. Sheet 7. RAST/IMG protein-encoding gene identification cross-reference for protein-encoding genes identified in AH-147-K21. Sheet 8. RAST/IMG protein-encoding gene identification cross-reference for protein-encoding genes identified in AH-151-C14. Sheet 9. RAST/IMG protein-encoding gene identification cross-reference for protein-encoding genes identified in AH-151-A22. Appendix S5.1. Sheet 1: Unrarefied OTU table including OTU numbers, OTU sequences, taxonomy, and OTU counts. Sheet 2: OTU table, rarefied to a depth of 10,000 sequences per sample, including OTU numbers, OTU sequences, taxonomy, and OTU counts. Uclust-assigned taxonomy was derived from the SILVA_128 curated reference database at 97% sequence identity (k = kingdom, p = phylum, c = class, o = order, f = family, g = genus, s = species). Sheet 3: Abundances of prokaryotic phyla detected in each sample. The Proteobacteria have been subdivided into classes
    • …
    corecore