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The Elusive Chauffeur, by David H. Brown, follows a pair of detectives, mathematician Samuel Mohlar and Kenneth Gray, as they seek answers to an equation that just doesn’t add up. While hunting for the heiress’s personal chauffeur, the missing variable in a long line of suspects, they find themselves in the throes of a powerful gangster who is determined to see them to their graves. While searching for the killer, their own lives, and the lives of those around them, become endangered. Can they find the killer before the killer finds them? Join Detectives Mohlar and Gray in a race against the clock in The Elusive Chauffeur.
Who Is Alpha by David H. Brown follows mathematics professor Samuel Mohlar, his girlfriend Kay Townsend, and her sister, Jenny, as they seek a formula that can be used to produce a drug so powerful that anyone addicted to the drug is under the complete control of its supplier. Alpha and those in his organization will do anything to get the formula back. Can Mohlar and the Townsend sisters survive their attacks? Join them while they try to discover Who Is Alpha.
Description:This book, the first serious analysis of the doctrine of the Trinity for many years, presents a defense against the conservative treatment of the Trinity as an impenetrable "mystery," and against the radical position that the doctrine is incoherent and therefore unacceptable. Brown favors "the founding of a new discipline of philosophical theology (or the widening of the horizons of the philosophy of religion) to apply more widely the type of penetration of theology by philosophy" that he exemplifies in his treatment of the Trinity.He argues for belief in an interventionist God (theism rather than deism), and contends that biblical criticism and historical research do not imply the abandonment of Christian belief, since "the historical original" should not be equated with "theological truth." Although historical difficulties must prevent any literal acceptance of the Gospel accounts in toto, "the true Christ" can be disentangled from "the historical Jesus" by philosophical method.Wide-ranging in scope, rigorous and candid in argument, Brown''s work will prove of interest to educated Christian laypersons and others beyond the boundaries of professional theology and philosophy of religion.Perhaps most provocative is Brown''s assertion that the Resurrection must be accepted as a literally true visionary experience, and that anyone who accepts it must be prepared to take seriously other visionary experiences, for example, visions of the Virgin Mary, even if he rejects them in the end. "It is certainly an astonishing truth that God should be so interested in a being of such vastly inferior powers as man," says the author. "But that clearly must be the implication of the doctrine of the Trinity . . ." To have reached this conclusion by means of philosophical argument is to have taken a major step toward the "complete penetration of theology by philosophy" that Brown calls for.About the Contributor(s):David William Brown FBA is an Anglican priest and theologian who currently serves as Professor of Theology, Aesthetics and Culture in the Institute for Theology, Imagination and the Arts and as Wardlaw Professor at St Mary''s College, University of St Andrews.
About the Contributor(s):David William Brown FBA is an Anglican priest and theologian who currently serves as Professor of Theology, Aesthetics and Culture in the Institute for Theology, Imagination and the Arts and as Wardlaw Professor at St Mary''s College, University of St Andrews.
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