photo: Creative Commons / Ragesoss
Daniel Huntington Philosophy and Christian Art
photo: Creative Commons / Romary
On the cathedral of Clermont-Farrand, "The French people recognizes the Supreme Being and the immortality of the soul". Robespierre believed that reason is only a means to an end, and the singular end is Virtue.
photo: Public Domain / Cpu22
Immanuel Kant
photo: Creative Commons / UMWguy123
El Progreso
photo: Creative Commons / David Shankbone
Relaxing in the shade lower Central Park at 1:00 p.m.in New York
photo: Public Domain / Sir James
Goethe and Schiller
photo: Creative Commons / Judaism
Children in this photograph from a Nigerian orphanage show symptoms of malnutrition, with four illustrating the gray-blond hair symptomatic of kwashiorkor. Diet deficiencies Dietary habits play a significant role in the health and mortality of all humans. Imbalances between the consumed fuels and expended energy results in either starvation or excessive reserves of adipose tissue, known as body fat.[70] Poor intake of various vitamins and minerals can lead to diseases which can have far-reaching
photo: Creative Commons
ustice by Luca Giordano
photo: Creative Commons / Lvova
Lvova
photo: Creative Commons
Augustana Lutheran Church in Washington, D.C. is a "Reconciling in Christ" congregation, meaning they welcome all people, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity
photo: Creative Commons / Eloquence
Hans Holbein d. J. 047.
photo: Creative Commons
Colored plate from The Grammar of Ornament
photo: Creative Commons
Walter Seymour Allward's Justicia (Justice), outside Supreme Court of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario Canada
photo: Creative Commons / Fir0002
Aboriginal holllow log tomb
photo: Creative Commons
Strindberg's third wife, the actress Harriet Bosse, as Indra's Daughter in the 1907 première of A Dream Play.
photo: Creative Commons / Public Domain
A dinosaur leading sheep. Cologne, August 2005
photo: Creative Commons / Deepak Gupta
Sivakempfort in india
photo: Creative Commons / Auguste Millière
Thomas Paine
photo: Creative Commons
Portrait of Tolstoy in 1887, by Ilya Repin
photo: European Community / Shadow2700
Adams' Burial Site 002
photo: Creative Commons
Edward Elgar
photo: Creative Commons
Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine
photo: Creative Commons
Portion depicting Gluttony in Hieronymus Bosch's The Seven Deadly Sins and the Four Last Things
photo: Creative Commons
J. L. Urban, statue of Lady Justice at court building in Olomouc, Czech Republic
photo: Creative Commons / Isaac Oliver (–1617)
Edward Herbert 1st Baron Herbert of Cherbury by Isaac Oliver
photo: Creative Commons
Nicholas I
photo: Public Domain / Cott12
Sai Baba of Shirdi
photo: Creative Commons
General George B. McClellan with staff & dignitaries (from left to right): Gen. George W. Morell, Lt. Col. A.V. Colburn, Gen. McClellan, Lt. Col. N.B. Sweitzer, Prince de Joinville (son of King Louis Phillippe of France), and on the very right - the prince's nephew, Count de Paris.
photo: Creative Commons
Cloister of the Cathedral
photo: Creative Commons
His statue in Bodrum, ancient Halicarnassus. He has been called "The Father of History" (first conferred by Cicero) and "The Father of Lies".[12] As these epithets imply, there has long been a debate—at least from the time of Cicero's On the Laws (Book 1, paragraph 5)—concerning the veracity of his tales and, more importantly, the extent to which he knew himself to be creating fabrications.