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Showing 1 - 17 of
17 matches in All Departments
Did you miss the gold and silver spikes to $1900 and $50 in 2011?
Did you get in near the top and ride all the way down into the 2015
lows? Or perhaps you didn't buy at all, and by late 2016, while the
most explosive precious metals and mining stock run-up in decades
was taking place, you watched. You may think you've missed the
boat. But you would be wrong. David Morgan's research shows
decisively that as much as "90% of the profit potential becomes
available during the last 10% of the entire bull run"" - if you
avoid what he calls "the amateur's mindset." Second Chance: How to
Make and Keep Big Money from the Coming Gold and Silver Shock-Wave
empowers you to step onto the investment battlefield and leave it a
winner. Many fortunes will be made during the coming years. On
paper. But, when all is said and done, as the great speculator
Jesse Livermore declared, "On paper it will remain." Let us help
you keep most of your earnings and claim your place at the Winners'
Table.
This volume examines one health issue -- breast implants -- across
a series of contexts often thought to be separate -- media
coverage, doctor-patient interaction, doctor-doctor professional
communication, support group dialogues, public relations campaigns,
and more. In so doing, it provides a narrative of how communication
shapes the individual perceptions of health, government, and social
policy concerning health care.
At the core of the silicone breast implant controversy is the need
for people to act amid uncertainty about the health risks involved.
This need to weigh action in the midst of uncertain risk
characterizes a large number of health issues. The attempts of
patients, physicians, drug manufacturers, and others to seek and
provide both information and influence makes communication central
to these issues. Consequently, the questions explored in this
volume will interest a diverse group of readers. This audience
includes plastic surgeons in particular, physicians in general, and
anyone involved with women's health issues. As the medical
profession struggles with its identity amid changes in public
attitudes, government regulations, and medical practices, this
volume's findings concerning media portrayals of doctors and
medical devices become even more important.
Finally, this study reveals how interrelated public information
and private decisions are, and how closely media and interpersonal
relationships fit. Tracing one medical issue across interpersonal,
organizational, public relations, and mediated forums has clearly
demonstrated the multiple ways those communication channels overlap
and inform one another.
What do physicians, nurses, chaplains, and social workers think
about moral and religious issues in care for the dying? These
professionals live with death, including many untimely and
difficult deaths, on a daily basis. Based on intensive interviews
with a cross sample of health care professionals, David H. Smith
details how the churches could not only be supportive of these
primary caregivers in dealing with end of life issues, but how they
could enlist their help in informing their own congregations about
the realities of death. To care for the dying is spiritually
demanding work. Churches should not let health professionals
struggle with religious issues whether of patients, families, or
their own in isolation. Smith's respondents offer powerful
perspectives on the issue of physician assisted suicide. Religious
and theological ethics cannot afford to ignore insights and
questions that come from those who deal with dying every day.
Finding meaning in the face of human suffering comes less from
doctrine than from living a certain kind of life. This book is a
clarion call for new, practical, and vital forms of education,
support, and commitment, particularly within the churches, in the
cause of improving care for the dying.
This volume examines one health issue -- breast implants -- across
a series of contexts often thought to be separate -- media
coverage, doctor-patient interaction, doctor-doctor professional
communication, support group dialogues, public relations campaigns,
and more. In so doing, it provides a narrative of how communication
shapes the individual perceptions of health, government, and social
policy concerning health care.
At the core of the silicone breast implant controversy is the need
for people to act amid uncertainty about the health risks involved.
This need to weigh action in the midst of uncertain risk
characterizes a large number of health issues. The attempts of
patients, physicians, drug manufacturers, and others to seek and
provide both information and influence makes communication central
to these issues. Consequently, the questions explored in this
volume will interest a diverse group of readers. This audience
includes plastic surgeons in particular, physicians in general, and
anyone involved with women's health issues. As the medical
profession struggles with its identity amid changes in public
attitudes, government regulations, and medical practices, this
volume's findings concerning media portrayals of doctors and
medical devices become even more important.
Finally, this study reveals how interrelated public information
and private decisions are, and how closely media and interpersonal
relationships fit. Tracing one medical issue across interpersonal,
organizational, public relations, and mediated forums has clearly
demonstrated the multiple ways those communication channels overlap
and inform one another.
For over 30 years, The Silent Garden has offered parents of deaf
children the support and unbiased information needed to fully
realize their children's potential. This completely revised third
edition is a must-have resource that will help parents navigate the
complex and unique challenges they face. Accessible, practical,
and, above all, open-minded, The Silent Garden educates parents
quickly and thoroughly about the many conflicting points of view on
what is best for their deaf children. Authors Paul W. Ogden and
David H. Smith, who are both deaf, present examples and research
that guide parents through often unfamiliar territory. From coping
mechanisms for parents to advice on creating healthy home
environments, the authors cover a range of topics that impact
day-to-day actions and decision-making. The topic of communication
is discussed extensively as communication access and language
development are crucial not only for intellectual growth, but also
for positive family and social relationships. The authors look at
American Sign Language, English, and various other modes of
communication available to deaf children. Different educational
options are presented, and technology including the debate about
cochlear implants is reviewed. Deaf children with special needs are
considered here as well. Each topic is accompanied by real-life
stories that offer further insight. Always encouraging, The Silent
Garden empowers parents to be the best advocates for their deaf
children. Throughout, the authors emphasize that each choice is
highly personal, and they stress that all deaf children have the
potential to lead rich, productive, and exciting lives.
Religious Giving considers the connection between religion and
giving within the Abrahamic traditions. Each contributor begins
with the assumption that there is something inherently right or
natural about the connection. But what exactly is it? To whom
should we give, how much should we give, what is the relationship
between our giving and our relationship to God? Writing for the
introspective donor, congregational leader, or student interested
in ways of meeting human needs, the authors focus on the
philosophical or theological dimensions of giving. The
contributors' goal is not to report on institutional practices, but
to provide thoughtful, constructive guidance to the reader informed
by a critical understanding of the religious traditions under
review."
Did you miss the gold and silver spike runs to $1900 and to $50 in
2011? Did you get in near the top and ride them all the way down
into the December 2015 lows? Or perhaps you didn't buy at all, and
by late 2016, while the most explosive precious metals and mining
stock run-up in decades was taking place, you watched. You may
think you've missed the boat. But you would be wrong. David
Morgan's research has shown decisively that as much as "90% of the
profit potential for the metals and miners become available during
the last 10% of the entire bull run." But only if you avoid what he
calls "the amateur's mindset." Second Chance: How to Make and Keep
Big Money from the Coming Gold and Silver Shock Wave empowers you
to step onto the investment battlefield and leave it a winner. Many
people will make fortunes during the coming years. On paper. But,
when all is said and done, as the great speculator Jesse Livermore
declared, "On paper it will remain."
In a world where advertisements lead us to hope for a life free
from suffering, facing the reality of suffering can be a particular
challenge. Yet the reality of suffering is one that we all face in
the course of our lives. While Christianity often has the
reputation of a tradition that promotes the idea that all suffering
is good for you and makes you a better person, there is, in fact,
much more variety and nuance to the tradition. While there are
those who advocate a wholesale acceptance, there are others who
question the source of suffering and call for it to be fought
against. This book delves into the world of five
theologians-Gregory the Great, Julian of Norwich, Jeremy Taylor, C.
S. Lewis and Ivone Gebara-to understand their perspectives and draw
on their approaches as a way of understanding what Christian
responses to suffering look like. This book constructs a
contemporary theology that affirms the importance of the call to
combat unjust suffering through acts of love and mercy, while also
affirming that acceptance of the reality of endemic suffering,
found in all five theologians, can provide us with opportunities to
grow spiritually, live more faithfully and to experience the
blessings in the midst of suffering that are a foretaste of
heavenly bliss.
The complexities of healthcare situations often include the
religious commitments of patients. They should include those of
healthcare professionals as well. In this fresh approach to
problems in medical ethics, contributors provide case studies,
interviews, and personal narratives that help ethicists listen more
attentively and offer wiser critiques of the moral issues
involved.
"This timely, well-written book brings together the collective
experience of experts from the fields of medicine, psychiatry,
religious studies, bioethics, and molecular genetics in an effort
to develop coherent guidelines for the counseling of potential
sufferers from genetic diseases." Journal of Religion and
Health
This book presents 29 case studies that identify the most
important ethical issues that are likely to emerge from new
technologies of genetic testing and develops a series of guidelines
based on those case studies. By providing the clinical origins and
rationale behind each of its recommendations, the book will help
readers think through the ethical issues and will assist them in
the development of additional guidelines."
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Exploring Individual Modernity (Hardcover)
Alex Inkeles; Contributions by David H. Smith, Karen A Miller, Amar K. Singh, Vern L. Bengston, …
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R2,003
R1,873
Discovery Miles 18 730
Save R130 (6%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The culmination of more than ten years of research carried out in
over 50 countries around the world, this volume shows how the
forces of modernization on the developing countries change the
attitudes and behavior of men acting in their roles as husbands and
fathers, as members of ethnic communities, and as citizens of
emerging nation-states. The research gathered here demonstrates
that the impact of modern institutions on individual psychic
adjustment is much less severe than is often imagined and the book
explores the meaning of modernization in human terms. In addition,
for the first time the theory and method for studying individual
modernity are applied to the so-called socialist countries. Inkeles
et al. highlight the implications of individual modernity for
understanding contemporary and future social change in both
developing and advanced countries. "Exploring Individual Modernity"
completes the portrait of "modern man" first sketched in "Becoming
Modern", the first book to report on the findings on Social and
cultural Aspects of Modernization.
It seems self-evident that giving is a good thing. But there are
profound arguments against a social stress on giving, many of them
couched in the language of justice. In this book, scholars from a
variety of fields associated with philanthropy discuss the moral
issues surrounding efforts to do good. The chapters are arranged in
five parts: "Important Exemplars," "Deciding Whom to Help," "Issues
for Religious Communities," "The Importance and Insufficiency of
Charity," and "Retrospect and Prospect."
The contributors are David M. Craig, Elliot N. Dorff, David C.
Hammack, Amy A. Kass, John Langan, S.J., Paul Pribbenow, Paul G.
Schervish, David H. Smith, William M. Sullivan, Philip Turner, and
Patricia H. Werhane.
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