Letters to the Editor
February 19, 2018[…] saw a young man who after four years was hit with the irrelevance of his studies to human needs, the hypocritical tinsel of the homecoming. Disillusioned, confused, not a person but a commodity to […]
[…] saw a young man who after four years was hit with the irrelevance of his studies to human needs, the hypocritical tinsel of the homecoming. Disillusioned, confused, not a person but a commodity to […]
[…] go to “every kindred, tongue, and people,” how can we justify the exclusion of over 100 million human beings? One final comment. It seems to me it would simplify matters if the theological aspect […]
[…] depends on the extent to which we view the substance of religion, sacredness, and the eternal as human constructs that exist in temporal and spatial contexts. Humans have imbued Utahn landscapes with meaning for […]
[…] sort of title, I guess. It means someone who has learned to kill for gain. To convert human life into wealth.” Mary snorted. “Well, that’s Ammon Kimball . And Naman Retting . A lot […]
[…] must be directed by God (Mosiah 8:13). These material objects, which are handled and manipulated by a human being, are things that are hidden, either in time as the past or the future, or […]
[…] Professor of Violin and Music Education at Brigham Young University–Idaho. She received a Ph.D. in Music and Human Learning from the University of Texas at Austin, and Bachelors and Masters degrees from Brigham Young […]
[…] Professor of Violin and Music Education at Brigham Young University–Idaho. She received a Ph.D. in Music and Human Learning from the University of Texas at Austin, and Bachelors and Masters degrees from Brigham Young […]
[…] write off much of Utah’s history as a vain exercise of passions or as a study in human irrationality. Perhaps the time has come to accept the contemporary statements that “the Mormon Question” involved […]
[…] The Naked Capitalist (Salt Lake City, Utah: published by the author, 1970. 144 pp., $2.00), a review -essay of Dr. Carroll Quigley’s book, Tragedy and Hope (New York: Macmillan, 1966). Originally we asked Professor […]
[…] critical race consciousness raising, even when it is a byproduct of the book’s shortcomings more than by design of the book. May those with eyes to see and ears to hear, who do justice […]