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Development was founded on the belief that religion was not
important to development processes. The contributors call this
assumption into question & explore the practical impacts of
religion by looking at the developmental consequences of
Pentecostal Christianity in Africa, & contrasting Pentecostal
& secular models of change.
Though statistics indicate that trillions of dollars will be
transferred to the younger generation in the next 50 years, the
recipients of that inherited wealth are unlikely to preserve and
pass on their inheritance intact. Faced with this prospect, many
families today wonder how to successfully transmit to their progeny
their own capacity, connections, compassion, and competency that
built the original wealth, so that future generations can enjoy
these same advantages, and more.
"The Legacy Family," written by two experts in the field, will
provide readers with a roadmap for detailing how to leave family
wealth and more importantly, legacy, intact. Readers will learn a
variety of skills, from how to articulate a collective vision for
the future that can be embraced by all family members to the
importance of creating a process so that future generations can
help each member shape their own future, while nourishing their
close family bonds.
This is must reading for any family that wishes to ensure that
their future generations have a solid foundation on which to build
successful lives.
Neurology for the Hospitalist is a concise and eminently practical
resource for inpatient neurological care. Internal Medicine
Hospitalists frequently face patients with neurological issues and
many feel that their training was insufficient in this area.
Hospitalists are often the primary inpatient care providers for
this patient population as many perceive Neurology to be an
Internal Medicine subspecialty. Both new and experienced
hospitalists will benefit from this handbook. In addition, medical
students and residents will find this to be an excellent at the
bedside resource. The format of the handbook allows one to quickly
learn the differential diagnosis, appropriate testing, signs to
watch for, and treatment strategies for the most frequently
encountered neurologic conditions. Each topic covers commonly asked
questions and elements that warrant close attention. For the
hospitalist in particular, proposed quality metrics are given for
major neurological diagnoses. No other book provides the
hospitalist caring for patients with neurological issues the
essential elements of that care in such a useable way. The focus is
on practical information that will guide the best care.
Localization 1. C.S. Bosch, J.J.H. Ackerman, St. Louis, MO/USA
SurfaceCoil Spectroscopy 2. P. Styles, Oxford, UK Rotating Frame
Spectroscopyand Spectroscopic Imaging 3. P.A. Bottomley,
Schenectady, NY/USA DepthResolved Surface Coil Spectroscopy (Dress)
4. R.J. Ordidge, J.A. Helpern, Detroit, MI/USA Image Guided Volume
Selective Spectroscopy: A Comparison of Techniques for In-Vivo 31P
NMR Spectroscopy of Human Brain 5. M. Decorps, D. Bourgeois,
Grenoble, France Localized Spectroscopy Using Static Magnetic Field
Gradients: Comparison of Techniques 6. J.A. den Hollander, P.R.
Luyten, Ad J.H. Marien, Best, The Netherlands 1H NMR Spectroscopy
and Spectroscopic Imaging of the Human Brain Spectral Editing and
Kinetic Measurements 7. H.P. Hetherington, Birmingham, AL/USA Homo-
and Heteronuclear Editing in Proton Spectroscopy 8. D. Freeman, R.
Hurd, Fremont, CA/USA Metabolite Specific Methods Using Double
Quantum Coherence Transfer Spectroscopy 9. B.A. Berkowitz, Research
Triangle Park, NC/USA Two-Dimensional Correlated Spectroscopy
In-Vivo 10. G. Navon, Tel Aviv, Israel; T. Kushnir, Tel Hashomer,
Israel; N. Askenasy, O. Kaplan, Tel Aviv, Israel Two-Dimensional
31P-1H Correlation Spectroscopy in Intact Organs and Their Extracts
11. M. Rudin, A. Sauter, Basel, Switzerland Measurement of Reaction
Rates In Vivo Using Magnetization Transfer Techniques
Development was founded on the belief that religion was not
important to development processes. The contributors call this
assumption into question and explore the practical impacts of
religion by looking at the developmental consequences of
Pentecostal Christianity in Africa, and by contrasting Pentecostal
and secular models of change.
Henry Longueville Mansel published his Bampton Lectures in 1858,
twenty seven years after Hegel's death and twelve years before the
publication of Ritschl's Rechtfertigung und Versoehnung. The timing
is significant. As a sweeping critique of liberalism, frequently
symbolized by the work of Hegel, the lectures react to the slow but
inexorable permeation of English religious thought by German ways
of thinking. By 1858, the process was sufficiently widespread that
Mansel felt justified in devoting the principal portion of his work
to the attack. Ritschl marks the effective end of Hegel's direct
influence on theology and a return to a more Kantian mode of
thinking. His gambit had already been made, for Mansel is in many
ways a more cautious version of Ritschl. Mansel, however, wrote in
English and had the misfortune to say what he did at the beginning
of a movement so strong that it allowed no quali fication. Thus
Mansel's thought was rarely accepted. He was certainly not ignored,
at least at the time. The lectures, entitled "The Limits of
Religious Thought," were an immediate sensation. They were quickly
reprinted both on the Continent and in America and went through two
editions in 1858, two more in 1859, and a fifth in 1867. For a
period they became "almost a textbook in the schools of the
University. " 1 Few leading divines of the day were silent and
fewer yet were neutral.
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God is the Source
Daniel D Freeman
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R385
Discovery Miles 3 850
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"Much of the social history of the Western world, over the past 3
decades, has been a history of what worked with what sounds good."
-Thomas Sowell
This is a new release of the original 1957 edition.
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