LiFELiNE FOUNDATiON iNC. » LiFELiNE/Project Enlightenment
6th class Below P7,000,000 A group of about 15 Lifeline Foundation workers along with our Director went early on Sept 10 th to Plaridel, Quezon, via Batangas and Lucena City. We arrived at the Municipal Hall to the warm welcome of Vice Mayor Tumagay, and the whole Sangguniang Bayan Councilors. We were given the floor to present what Project Enlightenment’s aims and objectives were in conducting these recon trips. We were received with enthusiasm, as they verbalized how their town and barangays needed help in the areas of education and investment into local business and industry. Three Councilors took our team for a short tour of the surrounding barangays, showing us the different aspects of the community so that we could get a much clearer picture of the town’s situation. We visited one school, the Elementary School at Barangay Tanuaun, gathering information on their student population, their success rate, etc. We were taken to the local wet market to see the state of basic commodities and the availability of goods. And lastly we were shown their once-thriving shipping pier, which was destroyed by the last major typhoon, Millenio, in 2006. We proudly took our first steps into Project Enlightenment with this trip, and we have filled our calendar with many more towns and barangays to visit these next several months. As we gather information on our Pacific Coastal towns, we are carefully structuring and planning Project Enlightenment’s educational and business cooperative ventures that we know will make a difference in uplifting Filipino lives. 7 Comments The Green Marinée template by Ian Main - Built for Wordpress 1.5
Category: Project Enlightenment
Age of Enlightenment - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Origins After the revolution of knowledge commenced by Sir Isaac Newton and in a climate of increasing disaffection with repressive rule, Enlightenment thinkers believed that systematic thinking might be applied to all areas of human activity, and carried into the governmental sphere, in their explorations of the individual , society and the state . [4] Its leaders believed they could lead their states to progress after a long period of tradition , irrationality , superstition , and tyranny which they imputed to the Middle Ages . The movement helped create the intellectual framework for the American , French , and Haitian Revolutions , Poland 's Constitution of May 3, 1791 , Russia's 1825 Decembrist Revolt , the Latin American independence movement , and the Greek national independence movement . In addition, Enlightenment ideals were influential in the Balkan independence movements against the Ottoman Empire , and many historians and philosophers credit the Enlightenment with the later rise of classical liberalism , socialism , democracy , and modern capitalism . The Age of Enlightenment receives modern attention as a central model for many movements in the modern period. Another important movement in 18th century philosophy, closely related to it, focused on belief and piety. Some of its proponents, such as George Berkeley , attempted to demonstrate rationally the existence of a supreme being. Piety and belief in this period were integral to the exploration of natural philosophy and ethics , in addition to political theories of the age. However, prominent Enlightenment philosophers such as Thomas Paine , Voltaire , Jean-Jacques Rousseau , and David Hume questioned and attacked the existing institutions of both Church and State . The 19th century also saw a continued rise of empiricist ideas and their application to political economy , government and sciences such as physics , chemistry and biology . The continent of Europe had been ravaged by religious wars in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.
Category: Enlightenment Philosophy
Dan Millman Interview 1998
An Enlightenment Interview with Dan Millman [Jordan S. Gruber conducted this interview with Dan Millman via e-mail in late July, 1998. The interview was inspired by Dan's new book, Everyday Enlightenment: The Twelve Gateways to Personal Growth , which, as its title alone indicates, touches on many themes found here at www.Enlightenment.com. Odds are, this will be one of the most interesting sessions of 20 Questions you've ever encountered.] 20 Questions With Dan Millman 1 . Books like Everyday Enlightenment , as wonderful as they may be, are notorious for their inability to motivate readers to actually do the exercises contained within. Other than forming groups of practitioners (as Murphy and Leonard urge people to do in The Life We Are Given ), what is the best way for someone to actually go through your book, Pathway by Pathway, and actually get themselves to do the exercises? ANS : I don't know what you mean by "books like Everyday Enlightenment ." Nor can I comment on hypothetical books. Everyday Enlightenment is not designed to "motivate" readers, since, as it clearly points out, motivation comes and goes. The second gateway/chapter, "Reclaim Your Will" directly addresses the perennial challenge of turning what we know into what we actually do. Whether or not a reader does the exercises is not within my control (nor should it be); in any case, daily life provides the exercises that test and teach us.
Category: Everyday Enlightenment
Tower.com: Enlightenment And the Intellectual Foundations of Modern Culture by Louis Dupre: Books: Paperback
Enlightenment And the Intellectual Foundations of Modern Culture Louis Dupre Price: $24.40 This item qualifies for FREE Shop N' Save Shipping for orders over $25 . Check individual shipping price.
Category: 18th Century Enlightenment
Untitled
Close this Window John Locke Locke, John, 1632-1704, English philosopher, founder of British empiricism . Locke's two most important works, Essay Concerning Human Understanding and Two Treatises on Civil Government ( . txt-only version of Second Treatise ), both published in 1690, quickly established him as the leading philosopher of freedom. In the Essay he opposed the rationalist belief in innate ideas, holding that the mind is born a blank upon which all knowledge is inscribed in the form of human experience. He distinguished the primary qualities of things (e. g., extension, solidity, number) from the secondary qualities (e. g., color, smell, sound), which he held to be produced by the direct impact of the world on the sense organs. The primary qualities affect the sense organs mechanically, providing ideas that faithfully reflect reality; thus science is possible. Later empiricists such as Hume and George Berkeley based their systems largely on Locke's theory of knowledge. In political theory he was equally influential.
Category: John Locke Enlightenment