Mccabe family history
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Zhang, W.L., McCabe, B.A. and Morrison, L. (2018) Stabilisation of a dredged marine sediment: geotechnical and contaminant leaching properties Proceedings of Civil Engineering Research in Ireland (CERI 2018) , pp.295-300 [ARAN Link] [Details]
O'Dwyer, K.G., McCabe, B.A., Sheil, B.B. and Hernon, D. (2018) Blackpool South Strategy project: analysis of pipe-jacking records Proceedings of Civil Engineering Research in Ireland (CERI 2018) , pp.265-270 [ARAN Link] [Details]
Ó Conchubhair, I., McCabe, B.A. and Timoney, M.J. (2018) Laboratory Push-In Resistance Tests (PIRT) in a cement-stabilised pseudo-fibrous peat Proceedings of Civil Engineering Research in Ireland (CERI 2018) , pp.277-282 [ARAN Link] [Details]
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Joseph McCabe
Joseph McCabe (1867-1955) was an English writer and speaker, famous his numerous essays (he wrote more than 250 books) on such diverse subjects as free thought, religion, war, Catholicism (he was a Roman Catholic priest).
Brief biography
McCabe was born in Macclesfield and then his family moved to Manchester. He entered the order of the Franciscans aged 15, was ordered a Catholic priest at age 23, and then went to study in Belgium at the Catholic University of Louvain. He learned Hebrew and Syriac, moved back to England, and ended up losing his faith, leaving priesthood in 1896. It is then that he started writing. He was famously criticised by Chesterton in a quote we love, and which does not take anything away from McCabe's works but puts them in a certain perspective: “Mr McCabe thinks I am not serious and only funny, because Mr McCabe thinks funny is the opposite of serious. Funny is the opposite of not funny, and of nothing else.”
Most of his books were published by Halderman-Julius, and were known as and divided into Little blue books and Big
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Joseph McCabe
Joseph Martin McCabe (Macclesfield, 12 de noviembre de 1867–10 de enero de 1955) fue un orador, librepensador y escritor inglés. Anteriormente había sido ordenado como sacerdote católico. Ha sido calificado como «uno de los más grandes portavoces del librepensamiento en Inglaterra».[1]
Convertido en crítico de la Iglesia católica, McCabe se unió a grupos como la Asociación Racionalista o la Sociedad Nacional Laica. Criticó el cristianismo desde un punto de vista racionalista, pero también estuvo involucrado con la South Place Ethical Society, organización que surgió del protestantismo disidente y fue precursora del humanismo secular moderno.
Primeros años
[editar]Nació en Macclesfield, condado de Cheshire, en el seno de una familia católica irlandesa. La familia se mudó a Mánchester cuando McCabe era todavía un niño. A los quince años ingresó en la Orden Franciscana, y pasó un año de estudios preliminares en el monasterio de Gorton. Su período de noviciado transcurrió en Killarney, tras el cual se trasladó a Forest Gate en Londres (al actual St B
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