BP International (Classic) is an international publishing organization that publishes all kinds of books in the areas of Action and Adventure, Classics, Comic Book or Graphic Novel, Detective and Mystery, Fantasy, Historical Fiction, Horror, Literary Fiction, Romance, Science Fiction (Sci-Fi), Short Stories, Suspense and Thrillers, Biographies and Autobiographies, Cookbooks, Essays, History, Memoir, Poetry, Self-Help, Devotional and Religious, etc.

Journals

  • Quietness as a Reflection of an Aesthetic Concept in Contemporary Music

    This article examines the theoretical understanding of quietness and its significance in contemporary culture. Quietness is explored as a cultural phenomenon, defining its cultural and philosophical significance. It also highlights the different forms found in the culture, such as pauses, fading sound, stillness, and tranquillity. The paper analyses the interaction and mutual reversibility of noise and music. It treats this process as a natural progression in music art development. A new notion of quietness' functional specificity in music composition is introduced in the article: the ‘quiet’ finale, the non-culminating finale, the postlude, and the fading of the sound.

    The monograph examines the poetics of quietness in contemporary musical art and examines the different forms of stillness in culture. The paper explores the multi-dimensional nature of stillness, encompassing both existence and interpretation, drawing on Cage and Schiarrino interpretations. The author explores the poetics and manifestations of quietness in musical works, examining the 'movement pattern' of quietness in compositions and attempting to classify culminations involving the concept of quietness.

    Quietness is seen as a figurative and semantic universal that connects different artistic tendencies and enables the synthesis of different art forms. Its significance in music is evidenced by composers such as Gubaidulina, Schnittke, Cage, Nono, Mahler and Pärt, who consistently use it as a stylistic characteristic.

  • The Absolute Openness as the Groundless Ground of All Nature

    In the beginning of this 21st century it seems that nature, including human beings, are going to ruin. The nature, in which human beings are included, is now regarded as natural resources. Human beings suffer from the gradually increasing destruction of their environments and through the disparity of earnings between those in the developed and developing nations.

    Every human being on this planet is affected by rising temperatures due to the increase in CO2 emissions, which then lead to increased climate related problems such as floods, tornadoes and typhoons, forest fires and increased sea surface temperatures. This Earth crisis we are experiencing seems to be some kind of attack. All over the world, many ways have been tried to avoid this crisis and one of these is through SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals).

    However, it seems to be philosophically very important, that a paradigm shift should be enforced, that can become the base or openness to be able to subsume the 17 goals in SDGs. The four paradigms of thinking and daily life since Plato (ca.427-ca.347 B.C.) in ancient Greek philosophy until G.W. F. Hegel (1770-1831) were as follows: relative being (e.g. the natural philosophy in ancient Greece), absolute being (e. g. the Catholic theology of Thomas Aquinas (ca.1225-1274) in European medieval ages), relative nothingness in modern ages (e.g. anxiety and despair in S. Kierkegaard (1813-1855) and nihil in nihilism (e.g. nihil in Nietzsche).

    Kitaro Nishida (1870-1945), who advocated the philosophy of the field of the absolute nothingness and later became the founder of the philosophy of the Kyoto School including Hajime Tanabe (1885-1962) and Keiji Nishitani (1900-1990), advocated the paradigm “absolute nothingness” (=Buddhistic emptiness, or my term “absolute infinite openness”) that subsumes not only  all kinds of thinking but also all nature including the above stated four paradigms.

  • Praxis, Folks’ Beliefs, and Rituals: Explorations in the Anthropology of Religion

    The contributions assembled in this volume are the result of the “writing Anthropology” graduate and doctoral seminar of the department of anthropology and ethnology of Xiamen university. An original methodology and organization that has empowered young researchers to explore anthropological themes they are interested in through collective decision-making process. Each participant was asked to suggest a research theme for the semester seminar. The selected themes were listed by decreasing frequency and returned to the participants for a second tour. Anthropology of religion ended up being selected as the research theme for the 2020-2021 academic year. The crafting and production of the essays assembled here was articulated on a systematic combination of oral presentations and written assignments. The collected essays focus on the cultural dimensions of religion through contextualized and renewed anthropological analyses of the socio-cultural embodiments of its ideas and principles. The assembled contributions are organized into three parts: 1) Religion as Praxis; 2) Folks Beliefs and Rituals; and finally, 3) Sanctified Places, Objects, and syncretic.

  • The Heart - the Source of All Life

    After 200,000 years since the modern human evolved on earth the human heart is continued to be the sacred, miraculous and majestic organ. The sacricity of the human heart is clearly derived from its marvelous duties and functions that approach optimal condition when it is functioning at optimal states physically, mentally and spiritually. The cutting edge research we are leading with our international scientific group nowadays is a true revolution in human understanding of the heart as central operator of our psychophysiological well being as well as the astrobiological orchestrator with higher energetic levels organizing the global process governing our higher wisdom and consciousness.

     

  • The Kingdoms (The Delusional City) Part 1

    This book describes about a story of 4 separated kingdoms of which each kingdom has its own king and army the Gedges a wealthy family that lives in the south of Arcton.

  • A Frozen Flower

    A Frozen Flower reflects nowadays marriage where some people conclude hasty marriage based on riches.

  • Frame Your Project

    The title of the present book indicates the mutual relationships of sociology with other existing entities. As the time passes by, new inventions appear, new problems and pains emerge, new solutions are needed, new studies are required to be introduced and made accessible. All such changes need to be studied, and the means of which is known as "sociology". Health and safety projects are highly required to be followed. The present changing world needs constant sociological investigations in the form of planned projects. Industrial societies could make better societies and more prosperous quality of life in the light of sociological researches in those societies. Insurance in various areas gave longer life to different age groups. People aging in different ranges need their own supervision, therapies etc. In modern time, each age group expects to live better, and with better standards. Response to such expectations need sociological appraisals. People today in every part of the world are facing disorders which never appeared before. Memory disorders are the new events which appear due to increasing aging all over the world. Sociological studies on rural-urban balance is a necessity to be kept in mind by the planners, and if not, more tensions would appear. 

  • The Crossroad of the Divine

    A prospectus of spiritual thought or Veda such as this “Crossroad of the Divine” is a “compilation of knowledge”. Vedas are collections of poems, ritual instructions, monographs and spiritual teachings called Upanishads. 


    The Upanishads, numbering 108, are instruments of learning that originated in the Indus Valley of India around 3000 BCE. The word Upanishad refers to a text and also a practice that “binds truth to the mind”. The technique and the Upanishads themselves are still taught around the world today. 

     

  • Functional English for Potential Achievers

    To the children of the world who enthusiastically yearn for an English Competency towards global competitiveness, to all English teachers who aspire to shower the brilliance of learning English, and most of all, to the almighty father, who is the source of knowledge and wisdom. Hence, this master piece is highly dedicated!

    To the students of Najd National School in Riyadh, KSA, and the supervisors of the National and International English Program: Mr. Mohsen Aguerbaoui and Mr. Waleed Abu Khadra.

  • The Serendipitous Practice of Neoclassical Economics-Modern Neoclassical Technologies

    In 2000, the United Nations set eight Millennium Development Goals (SDGs), which are supposed to be met by 2015. These goals are to halve between 1990 and 2015 the proportion of the population whose income is less than $ 1 and who suffers from hunger; Primary School for all;  Elimination of gender disparities; The two-thirds reduction between 1990 and 2015 in the mortality rate for children under five; The reduction of three quarters between 1990 and 2015 in the maternal mortality rate; Stopping the spread of AIDS, tuberculosis and other diseases; The development of a multidimensional environment allowing access to drinking water, respect for the environment and the disappearance of slums and the establishment of an international partnership for development.

    To achieve these objectives, countries must develop programs defining policies to fight poverty. The development of these finalized programs in documents called "Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers" (PRSP) is the necessary prerequisite for the granting of aid.  These documents should indeed make it possible to coordinate the action of the various donors and national authorities within the framework of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). PRSPs thus constitute the reference documents for concessional lending and debt relief operations under the Heavily Indebted Countries Initiative (HIPC).

  • Mind-Body Medicine: Quantic Approach to Mind-Body Interaction in Relation to Healing and Self-Healing

    In recent decades, medicine has undergone a profound transformation. The traditional view that separates the body and the mind is being replaced by a more integrative understanding, where emotional, psychological, and spiritual well-being are recognised as essential components of health. This perspective, often referred to as mind-body medicine, emphasises that healing involves more than the treatment of symptoms; it requires addressing the whole person.

    The intention of this book is to explore the interconnected pathways between the mind and the body, supported by both scientific research and clinical experience. By presenting evidence-based approaches alongside practical insights, it seeks to bridge modern biomedical knowledge with ancient healing traditions. Readers will discover how lifestyle, emotions, stress, and consciousness influence health, and how interventions such as meditation, relaxation techniques, nutrition, movement, and compassionate care can contribute to profound healing outcomes.

    This book is not only for healthcare professionals but also for individuals who wish to take an active role in their own healing journey. It invites readers to consider health as a dynamic balance, where prevention and self-awareness play as vital a role as medical treatment.

    I hope that the pages ahead will inspire you to view medicine not solely as a science, but also as an art—one that honours the complexity of human existence and the potential for transformation when mind and body are approached as one.