Finding the Treasure: Coordinate Grids

Finding the Treasure: Coordinate Grids
Author: Renata Brunner-Jass
Publisher: Norwood House Press
Total Pages: 50
Release: 2013-01-01
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 1599535734

Treasure hunts are always exciting, especially when you search together with friends. But, have you ever tried a new type of treasure hunt, called geocaching? Join five friends as they embark on a high-tech geocaching adventure, using a handheld GPS device. Along the way, learn how to use coordinate grids to plot data points from a table, label ordered pairs, and name coordinate points on a grid. Applied key concepts include the x-axis, y-axis, x-coordinate, and y-coordinate. Navigate to the next clue by using your knowledge of coordinate grids, and soon you will become a master at this game!

Finding Treasure

Finding Treasure
Author: Michelle Schaub
Publisher: Charlesbridge Publishing
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2019-09-17
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 1580898750

Clever poems tell the story of one inquisitive child's quest to start just the right collection to share at school. While everyone else is excited about presenting their treasures, one creative elementary schooler is stressed about her class's show-and-tell assignment. How is she supposed to share her collection if she doesn't collect anything? Polling her parents, visiting with Granny and Grandpa, and searching for the secret behind her siblings' obsession with baseball cards, she discovers she does, in fact, have something to share: a collection of stories and poems!

Finding Is the First Act

Finding Is the First Act
Author: John Dominic Crossan
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 150
Release: 2008-03-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 172522187X

An imaginative and illuminating study, Finding Is the First Act places historical thinking in creative tension with literary appreciation. The structures of Jesus's parable of the hidden treasure (Matt 13:44) are examined by mapping its plot options (finding, acting, buying) in view of other Jewish treasure stories and the vast array of treasure plots in world folklore. Startling differences emerge in the plot options chosen by Jesus that point to a new understanding of the directive to give up all one has for the Kingdom of God. "Why Jesus' treasure parable? For three reasons that I am aware of. First, . . . the story has always fascinated me. . . . Second, in recent work on parables there has often been a tendency to concentrate especially on the longer parables of Jesus. I wanted deliberately to move in theopposite direction and to give full emphasis to a very short parable . . . . Third, this particular parable, in contrast, for example, to that of The Mustard Seed, does not furnish much grist for the diachronic mill of biblical studies. I was deliberately choosing an item which, in isolation from its Matthean context, could hardly sustain a monograph study along the standard lines of tradition criticism." --from the Preface

Looking for Lost Treasure

Looking for Lost Treasure
Author: Gregory N. Peters
Publisher: Capstone
Total Pages: 49
Release: 2014
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 1476584710

"Describes famous treasure hunts and the tricks and tools treasure hunters use to find treasure"--

Agency and Integrality

Agency and Integrality
Author: Michael J. White
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 298
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9400953399

It is not very surprising that it was no less true in antiquity than it is today that adult human beings are held to be responsible for most of their actions. Indeed, virtually all cultures in all historical periods seem to have had some conception of human agency which, in the absence of certain responsibility-defeating conditions, entails such responsibility. Few philosophers have had the temerity to maintain that this entailment is trivial because such responsibility-defeating conditions are always present. Another not very surprising fact is that ancient thinkers tended to ascribe integrality to "what is" (to on). That is, they typically regarded "what is" as a cosmos or whole with distinguishable parts that fit together in some coherent or cohesive manner, rather than either as a "unity" with no parts or as a collection containing members (ta onta or "things that are") standing in no "natural" relations to one another. 1 The philoso phical problem of determinism and responsibility may, I think, best be characterized as follows: it is the problem of preserving the phenomenon of human agency (which would seem to require a certain separateness of individual human beings from the rest of the cosmos) when one sets about the philosophical or scientific task of explaining the integrality of "what is" by means of the development of a theory of causation or explanation ( concepts that came to be lumped together by the Greeks under the term "aitia") .

The Urban Treasure Hunter

The Urban Treasure Hunter
Author: Michael Chaplan
Publisher: Square One Publishers, Inc.
Total Pages: 244
Release: 2003-11-30
Genre: Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN: 9780757000904

A guide to finding valuable artifacts in the city that explains how locate, recover, and identify all types of treasures, including old coins, lost jewelry, hidden money, historical relics, antique bottles, and more.

Finding Jesus in Everyday Moments

Finding Jesus in Everyday Moments
Author: Anne Cetas
Publisher: Discovery House
Total Pages: 267
Release: 2021-04-29
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1640701354

Through 100 story-driven, Bible-focused devotions, you will be reminded that a personal relationship with your Creator changes everything. Popular Our Daily Bread author Anne Cetas invites you to wrestle with the peaks and valleys of life. “Jesus moments" journaling prompts you to draw near to God and reflect on His presence during everyday moments. Extra features will guide you toward a genuine encounter with the Lord each time you pick up the book.

Virtue Epistemology and the Analysis of Knowledge

Virtue Epistemology and the Analysis of Knowledge
Author: Ian Church
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2023-02-09
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1350258393

This book centers on two dominant trends within contemporary epistemology: first, the dissatisfaction with the project of analyzing knowledge in terms of necessary and jointly sufficient conditions and, second, the surging popularity of virtue-theoretic approaches to knowledge. Church argues that the Gettier Problem, the primary reason for abandoning the reductive analysis project, cannot viably be solved, and that prominent approaches to virtue epistemology fail to solve the Gettier Problem precisely along the lines his diagnosis predicts. Such an outcome motivates Church to explore a better way forward: non-reductive virtue epistemology. In so doing, he makes room for virtue epistemologies that are not only able to endure what he sees as inevitable developments in 21st-century epistemology, but also able to contribute positively to debates and discussions across the discipline and beyond.