How Did Athena Goddess Die
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The Conclusion of the Sexual Revolution
This is a book about sexual morality. Not a morality based on shame or tradition, however; but one based on combining the most up-to-date findings of sex researchers, with the most ancient teachings of the Judeo-Christian Bible. In this book, you will find that: Private masturbation and public nudity are the two Pillars, upon which all healthy attitudes towards Sex must be based. Faithful heterosexual monogamy is God's Plan for Sex, but a minority who deviate from this Plan (such as homosexuals) are nonetheless necessary for a whole society. And that Virgin Sex for young adults - which means enjoying sex play while rejecting intercourse - is the Key to: true romantic passion, equality between the sexes, and even to the very Future of Humanity. At last! A book that tells the truth about Sex and God.
Children of Danu, the Arrival of Ireland's First Gods
Long before Ireland's first kings walked the green hills, before the first stones of Newgrange caught the rising sun, a radiant people descended through fire and mist. They were the Tuatha Dé Danann—the Shining Tribe—bearers of wisdom, masters of sorcery, heirs of the goddess Danu herself. Their arrival marked the dawn of myth, the birth of Ireland's sacred imagination, and the beginning of a saga that would echo across millennia. In this sweeping and cinematic Volume One of the Irish Mythology Saga, Allen Carmichael brings the ancient gods of Ireland to life as never before. Drawing from the Lebor Gabála Érenn, early medieval manuscripts, and deep Indo-European mythic structures, The Coming of the Gods restores the Tuatha Dé Danann to their full grandeur—not as quaint fairy-folk, but as luminous beings who shaped Ireland's spiritual landscape. Step into an Ireland where… Divine ships burn on the shoreline as otherworldly warriors commit their fate to the island. Nuada's silver hand gleams on the battlefield of Mag Tuired. Lugh the Radiant rises, a young god whose mastery of every art alters destiny itself. The Morrígan strides through clouds and ravens, weaving prophecy into war. The Dagda's great cauldron overflows, promising abundance to all who gather under his protection. And the gods themselves descend into the hollow hills, becoming Ireland's hidden people—the Aos Sí, guardians of the unseen world. This is not a retelling. It is a restoration. A re-illumination of Ireland's oldest myths in rich, flowing narrative that reads like an ancient epic—cinematic, immersive, and emotionally resonant. Readers will discover: • The true origins of the Tuatha Dé Danann in Indo-European myth • The secrets of their four sacred treasures • Their cosmic battles against the Fir Bolg and the Fomorians • The rise of Lugh and the prophecy of sovereignty • Their metamorphosis into the Sidhe after the coming of the Milesians • And the deeper meaning behind Ireland's mythology of kingship, land, and destiny If you love myth, folklore, ancient civilizations, Celtic history, or the sweeping depth of authors like Stephen Fry, Madeline Miller, or Neil Gaiman—this book is for you. Prepare to enter a world where the divine walked the earth, where Ireland's hills held the footsteps of gods, and where myth was not fiction but a living memory. Ireland's greatest saga begins here. Step into the light of the Tuatha Dé Danann.
Sex, Death, and the Superego
This book is a personal reappraisal of psychoanalytic theories in the light of clinical experience. The first part is about sexuality and begins where psychoanalysis began, with hysteria. The second part is about the ego and the super-ego, the relationship of which dominated Freud's writing from his middle period onwards. The last part is on narcissism and the narcissistic disorders, a major preoccupation of psychoanalysis in the second half of the twentieth century.