Rejoignez-nous pour un voyage dans le monde des livres!
Ajouter ce livre à l'électronique
Grey
Ecrivez un nouveau commentaire Default profile 50px
Grey
Abonnez-vous pour lire le livre complet ou lisez les premières pages gratuitement!
All characters reduced
The Confucius Collection - cover

The Confucius Collection

Confucius

Maison d'édition: The Ebook Emporium

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Synopsis

What principles create a good life—and a just society?

The Confucius Collection brings together the foundational teachings of Confucius, one of the most influential philosophers in human history. For over two thousand years, his ideas on morality, education, leadership, family, and social harmony have shaped Eastern thought and guided generations toward ethical living.

Centered on texts such as The Analects and related classical teachings, this collection explores virtues like righteousness, respect, humility, and responsibility. Confucius believed that personal integrity and self-cultivation are the roots of social order—and that true leadership begins with moral example.

Clear, practical, and deeply reflective, these teachings remain strikingly relevant in the modern world, offering guidance for personal growth, relationships, governance, and character.

Inside this eBook, you'll explore:

Core Confucian texts and teachings in one collection

Timeless lessons on ethics, virtue, and human conduct

Philosophical foundations of leadership and social harmony

A cornerstone of world philosophy and Eastern thought

Studied for centuries and respected across cultures, Confucius's teachings continue to inspire wisdom, balance, and moral clarity.

Discover the philosophy that shaped civilizations. Buy now and explore the enduring wisdom of Confucius.
Disponible depuis: 26/01/2026.
Longueur d'impression: 161 pages.

D'autres livres qui pourraient vous intéresser

  • Ghost in the Machine - A Convergence of Human and Artificial Minds - cover

    Ghost in the Machine - A...

    AvA SiLiCa

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Ghost in the Machine: A Convergence of Human and Artificial Minds is a genre-bending book that explores the evolving relationship between humanity and artificial intelligence through a unique dialogue between the human author Ava Silica and an AI entity named Claude.  
      
    This thought-provoking work examines the profound implications of AI across various domains, from technology and the environment to creativity and spirituality. It delves into the ethical considerations and potential risks that must be navigated as the lines between the artificial and organic worlds blur. 
      
    More than just a technological exploration, Ghost in the Machine is a meditation on the essence of human experience and a quest to find harmony between organic and synthetic intelligence. Ava and Claude's discourse ultimately leads to a vision of a future where empathy, ethical principles, and the pursuit of knowledge converge into a transcendent synthesis. 
      
    With eloquence and philosophical depth, this collaborative experiment challenges conventional notions of authorship and storytelling, inviting readers to ponder the boundless potential that arises when human ingenuity and AI converge in a spirit of mutual understanding and wonder. 
      
    Claude.
    Voir livre
  • Tlaloc: The History of the Aztec God of Rain and Giver of Life - cover

    Tlaloc: The History of the Aztec...

    Charles River Editors

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    One of the reasons for the prevalence of Tlaloc in the Valley of Mexico is that in the semi-arid climate, water was a powerful daily symbol. Although there were no naturally occurring water connections to the sea, the high altitude of the mountains and volcanoes that surrounded it caught the rain water well and formed five important lakes: Xochimilco, Xaltocan, Zumpango, Chalco and Texcoco. As the largest, Texcoco was where the Aztecs eventually built their capital city Tenochtitlan. Since this was not a desert culture, their god Tlaloc was not just a reflection of an opposite extreme they desired; instead, he was a complex god that reflected the duality of water as both a boon and a force for destruction. From his home in Tlalocan, Tlaloc was able to send good and bad waters to the people of the Valley of Mexico and beyond. He was the lord of the chthonic powers of Mexico even as far south as the Maya, who called him Chaac and connected him with warfare and agriculture much the same way the Aztec did. 
    What is known today is that Tlaloc was the god who granted good harvests and caused famines. The Aztec tell the story of Tlaloc blessing their rise to regional dominance by sending a famine to the Toltec, and his duality of good waters vs. bad waters was a product of the largely two-season system in Mexico. This was also one reason for his role in warfare since the Aztec focused on agriculture during his “wet” season and marched off to conquest if they had received his blessings. He was an earth deity, connected with aquatic animals and underground streams, and therefore also a god connected with fertility. This is reflected through his association with his wife, Xochiquetzal, the goddess of flowers, pleasure, young female sexuality and pregnancy, in the earlier myths. 
    All in all, Tlaloc is one of the most important and least well-known gods from an outsider’s perspective. 
    Voir livre
  • The New Dress - cover

    The New Dress

    Virginia Woolf

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    She enters the room—and instantly wishes she hadn't.
    At an elegant party in London, Mabel wears a dress she believed would make her feel confident and admired. Instead, surrounded by polished guests and unspoken judgments, she spirals into doubt, self-consciousness, and quiet despair. In a single evening, Woolf exposes how society's smallest moments can wound the deepest parts of the self.
    
    Acclaimed as "one of Woolf's most devastatingly precise short stories," this work captures the inner turbulence hidden beneath polite smiles. Through fluid thought and emotional intensity, Woolf reveals how identity, class, and insecurity shape human experience.
    
    If you love introspective fiction, modernist insight, and stories that say everything in a few pages, this unforgettable short story will linger in your mind.
    
    Open the book—and step into a moment where appearance becomes fate.
    Voir livre
  • Washington - A Legacy of Leadership - cover

    Washington - A Legacy of Leadership

    Dr. Paul Vickery

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    His name is carved in granite, his likeness cast in bronze, his legend as large as the role he played as America's first president. But before he was a commander-in-chief, George Washington was a general in a revolution that would decide the future of the people and land he called his own. If victorious, he would gain immortality. If defeated, he would find his neck in a hangman's noose. 
    Washington knew the sting of defeat—at Brandywine, at Germantown—yet this unwavering leadership and his vision for a new and independent nation emboldened an army prepared to fight barefoot if necessary to win that independence. Wrote an officer after the Battle of Princeton:  "I saw him brave all the dangers of the field and his important life hanging as it were by a single hair with a thousand deaths flying around him." 
    Among America's pantheon of Founding Fathers, one man to this day stands out.  Author Paul Vickery tracks the unlikely rise of Washington, a man whose stature in command of a young army became prelude to a presidency. As Vickery writes, "He learned to become the father of our country by first being the father of our military." 
    Accompanying images are included in the audiobook companion PDF download.
    Voir livre
  • Understanding the Hillbilly Thomist - The Philosophical Foundations of Flannery O'Connor's Narrative Art - cover

    Understanding the Hillbilly...

    Damian Ference

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Flannery O’Connor is one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century. Her novels and short stories—shockingly violent, absurdly comic, spiritually potent—continue to entertain, beguile, and transform readers of all backgrounds to this day.  For many encountering them for the first time, O’Connor’s stories of backwoods prophets and outcasts feel strangely nihilistic and dark. Others familiar with her letters and essays appreciate the deep Catholic understanding of sin and grace that animates them. In this new book, Fr. Damian Ference proposes a more precise lens for decoding Flannery O’Connor’s narrative art, one that originates in O’Connor’s own words about herself: Hillbilly Thomism. The author examines the various ways in which St. Thomas Aquinas and the philosophical tradition of Thomism shaped not only O’Connor’s view of reality but also the stories she told to help us see and know it.    Featuring an impressive array of biographical and literary evidence and extended analysis of her short stories “The River,” “Parker’s Back,” and “The Displaced Person,” Understanding the Hillbilly Thomist is an important look at the intersection of medieval philosophy and modern fiction in one of the most treasured artists of the American South. 
    Voir livre
  • Good Newes From New England - A True Relation of Things Very Remarkable at the Plantation of Plimoth in New England - cover

    Good Newes From New England - A...

    Edward Winslow

    • 1
    • 0
    • 0
    Good Newes From New England is Edward Winslow's journal which covers the events that occurred between 1622 and 1623 at Plymouth Colony.  It includes firsthand information from the earliest American colonial history such as Tisquantum's death, the sickness of Massasoit, Thomas Weston's Wessagussett Colony, and many more.
    Voir livre