[br_filter_single filter_id=7451]
Shop
Showing all 6 results
-
English Medium Class 2
Classic Fables and Legends Aesop’s Fables (Published by Ladybird)
AESOP’S FABLES a Ladybird Book from the Classic Fables and Legends Series. Gloss Hardback 1995.
“Fables like The Boy Who Cried Wolf, The Tortoise and The Hare are loved as much today as when they were first told in ancient Greece. The seventeen classic fables collected here are accompanied with splendid illustrations and woodcuts.”SKU: EVCL622 -
English Medium Class 4, English Medium Class 7
Oliver Twist (Ladybird Classics), By: Charles
Oliver Twist has been sensitively abridged and retold to make it suitable for sharing with young children, while retaining all the key parts of Oliver’s adventures around Victorian London, including tangles with Fagin and his gang of thieves, pretty Nancy, kind-hearted Mr. Brownlow, and villainous Bill Sikes.
SKU: EVCL610 -
English Medium Class 3
The Jungle Book-(Ladybird classics) original
The Jungle Book has been sensitively abridged and retold to make it suitable for sharing with young children, while retaining all the key parts of the story including Mowgli’s life in the Jungle, his battle with Shere Khan, and fascinating details about learning to live with humans once more.
SKU: EVCL304995 -
English Medium Class 2
The wizard of OZ Level-4 (Lady Bird)
Is it possible to prove or disprove God’s existence? Arguments for the existence of God have taken many different forms over the centuries: the ontological, cosmological and teleological arguments; arguments which invoke miracles, religious experience and morality; and prudential arguments such as Pascal’s Wager. On the other hand are the arguments against theistic belief: the traditional problem of evil; the logical tensions between divine attributes such as omnipotence, omniscience and eternity; and arguments from the scale of the universe. In The Non-Existence of God, Nicholas Everitt reconsiders all of these arguments and examines the role that reason and knowledge play in the debate over God’s existence. He draws on recent scientific disputes over neo-Darwinism, the implication of big bang cosmology, and the temporal and spatial size of the universe; and discusses some of the most recent work on the subject, such as Plantinga’s anti-naturalism argument in favour of theism. Everitt’s controversial conclusion is that there is a sense in which God’s existence is disprovable, and that even in other senses a belief in God would be irrational.
SKU: EVCL309