|
|
Showing 1 - 25 of
63 matches in All Departments
The Articles of Configuration: What happened before Genesis began?
The scriptures amazingly describe the material building blocks of
the earth before our earthly sphere was formed. But, even more
amazing, is that the invisible blueprints describing the formation
of the universe and its lifeforms are hidden in plain sight in the
scriptures-in the form of flashback descriptions of what happened
before Genesis 1:1. The problem of mankind understanding these
blueprints has been that advancements in science were necessary to
understand what has been written from antiquity. Science and
theology has been locked together in a mighty struggle of ideas.
The process, at times, has been ugly as a caterpillar chomping on
leaves, regurgitating and trying to build a cocoon of how the
universe is really constituted. But this cocoon, like the human
brain, has an inside tension between left brained logic and right
brained dreaming. A mighty struggle ensues and at last a butterfly
emerges from the cocoon and its glistening wings dry in the sun. As
the butterfly discovers its destiny and ascends in flight into the
brilliant blue sky filled with fluffy white clouds, a serene
revelation of peace envelops the butterfly. It realizes that its
one wing of science and its other wing of theology are working in
harmony under a Master control. Thrilled and awed, the butterfly
uses both wings to ascend far above worldly ideas into realms that
it once only dreamed of.
Medievalists are increasingly grappling with spatial studies. This
timely book argues that geography is a crucial element in Sir
Thomas Malory's M orte Darthur and contributors shine a light on
questions of politics and genre to help readers better understand
Malory's world.
Medical texts provide a powerful means of accessing contemporary perceptions of illness and through them assumptions about the nature of the body and identity. By mapping these perceptions, from their 19th century focus on illness located in a biological body through to their 'discovery' of the psycho-social patient of the late 20th century, a history of identity, both physical and psychological, is revealed.
This book proposes a new conceptual framework for theorising young
people's relationship with crime. It emerges from a critique of the
narrow approach advocated by developmental criminology and argues
for an analysis that recognises and includes the important
contribution that the young themselves can make to the theorising
and understanding of their relationship with crime. Explicitly
using the voices of a group of working class young people who are
defined as 'a social problem', this approach emphasises how
criminal identities and pathways are strongly influenced by the
interactions embedded in political ecological systems and
relationships.
Drawing upon the work of the social psychologist Urie
Bronfenbrenner and sociologist Pierre Bourdieu, this book explores
young people's 'nested' and 'political' ecological relationships
with crime. A Political Ecology of Youth and Crime examines the
impacts of these relationships through an empirical investigation
of the important 'places' and 'spaces' in young people's lives; in
their social relationships with peers and family members; and
within formal institutional systems such as education, youth
justice and social care. This book makes an important new
contribution to how we understand the relationship between youth
and crime in the contexts of sociology, criminology, social
psychology and education.
Fungal diseases have been with us from antiquity; interest in the
chemo therapy of fungal disease has exploded in the past decade. To
plan and pro duce a book on the topic of antifungal chemotherapy
has come as a personal challenge - and something of an eye-opener -
towards the end of my re search career. A landmark publication
which still merits reading is Antifungal Chemotherapy (John Wiley
& Sons, Chichester, UK), edited by David Speller, which
appeared in 1980. However, the fact that ketoconazole, the first of
the modern, orally active, wide-spectrum antifungals, attracted no
more than two sentences in it indicates just how far we have come
in the 1980s. A steady stream of original papers and a number of
conference proceedings have chronicled this progress in drug
research; outstanding among the latter are the proceedings of an
international telesymposium, entitled Recent Trends in the
Discovery, Development and Evaluation of Antifungal Agents, edited
by Robert Fromtling (J.R. Prous, Barcelona, 1987) and volume 544 of
the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, entitled Antifungal
Drugs, edited by Vassil St. Georgiev, and containing papers and
posters presented at a most enjoyable 3-day conference held at
Garden City, New York, in the autumn of 1987."
Medical texts provide a powerful means of accessing contemporary
perceptions of illness and through them assumptions about the
nature of the body and identity. By mapping these perceptions, from
their nineteenth-century focus on illness located in a biological
body through to their 'discovery' of the psycho-social patient of
the late twentieth century, a history of identity, both physical
and psychological, is revealed.
Medievalists are increasingly grappling with spatial studies. This
timely book argues that geography is a crucial element in Sir
Thomas Malory's M orte Darthur and contributors shine a light on
questions of politics and genre to help readers better understand
Malory's world.
This book explores young people's 'nested' and 'political'
ecological relationships with crime through an empirical
investigation of the important 'places' and 'spaces' in young
people's lives; in their social relationships with peers and family
members; and within formal institutional systems such as education,
youth justice and social care.
Der Dyspepsiealmanach bietet zusammen mit dem dazugeh-rigen Video,
aber auchallein eine einfache und gleichzeitig wissenschaftlich
fundierte Einf}hrung in die Problematik der funktionellen
Dyspepsien. Anhand der verschiedenen Dyspepsietypen werden die
Fragen des klinischen Alltags praxisnah demonstriert. Das
Wesentliche ist in schematischen ]bersichten und Graphiken
zusammengefa t.
|
|